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V
SRIFFIN.
Capital of the Garden St)ot
- : ■'
of the World!
It I P V I S Is
Spalding COUBty Hfliit o
Co inty
Gworgia, and is
uated in tbs
tre of the beat
tion of the
•Empire the State
its South,
all
end varied indue
tries meet and
- fne a home and a profitable growth that otreer. is
«e the reason* for a
ne its popnlafion almost daily.
ft has ample and sufficient railroad facil
ties- the second point in importance on the
Central railroad Iwtween the capital of
State, forty miles distant, and its
seaport, 250 utiles away ; an
line to Chattanooga and the West by way
the Savannah, Griffin and North
Railroad; toe principal city on the
Midland and Gulf railroad, one
miles long, built largely through its own
terprise and soon to be extended to
and the systems of the Northeast,
connection with the great East
Virginia and graded Ueoigia and raijroad to system, i
other road soon e
bringing in trade and carrying out
and manufacturers. and flower
That this is the very cream
the agricultural and horicultura!
of the State is evidenced by the
that the State of Geo-fia and the
States unanimously chose it as the site
the Experiment Station, against the
efforts of every other section. It has»
crops that never tail, being C -itton, the
important crop in the South, and
which are gi owing to surpass eotton in
... C °(Jrithn’s record during the past half
proves it to be one of the most
cities in the South.
It nus bulk twolarge cotton factories
resenting *250,000 and shipping goods
over the world.
It has put u p two large iron and brass
dries, a fertilizer factory, a cotton seed
mill, a sash and blind lactory, a plow factory
an ice lactory, bottling works, a broom
factory, a mattress factory, a wire
factory and various smaller enterprises.
It has put in an electric light plant by
which the streets are brilliantly lighted.
It has completed an complete extensive
of waterworks, and giving furnishing protection
against fare, water every
where.
It has laid several miles of street railroad
for convenient transportation over its
area.
it has opened un the finest and largest
granite quarry in the State, for building
ballasting It secured and macadamizing purposes
has a cotton compress w.tn s
lull capacity for its large and in. reusing re
ceipts of this Southern staple. of graded pub¬
it has established a system
lic schools, with a seven years curriculum
second to nrne, a id has just erected one o
the largest una attest school buildings in tbs
State in addit:on to the former commod.ous
structure.
It has organized two new bankB. makings
total of four, with continued resources o'
half a million dollars.
It hastmilt two handsome new churches,
making a total ol ten.
It has built several handsome business
blocks and many beautiful residences, th»
building *150,000. record ol each year averaging
It has attracted around its borders fruit
growers from nearly every Statein the Union
and Canada, until it is surrounded on every
side bv orchards and vineyards, and has lie-
come the largest and best truitseetion in the
State, a single height car load of of its peaches netting
f1,280 in the the season.
It has doubled its wine making capacity,
makingby both Freucb and German, methods
both by individuals and by a large wine
company iucoi poruted in 1091.
It has been exempt from cyclones, flood?
and epidemics, and by reason of itu riipo
graphy will altitude never be subject 1,150 to them. tht
With au ol feet above
aeaievel, its bealthfu.nwss has attracted gen¬
eral attention.
It has just secured the permanent military
encampment of the State, adding about
*100,000 to its revenues every year.
With all those and other evidences of i,
five and growing town, with a health'll and
pleasant climate summer and winter, u
hospitable and cultured yeople, and of a sol
capable of producing any product Griffin offer, tht
temperate or semi-tropic zone, welcome to
every inducement and a hearty
new citizens
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
1 ^J^SSSSSsaasSi
PARKER'S
Never Fails to B©store dray
Hair to its Youthful Color.
Cures scalp diseases ft hair falling.
fiOc.and f LUO at Druggists
, Indigestion, Pain, Take in time. 50cts.
The only sure cure for Corns, f7
r HtSCOX ft CO M N.
GRATEFUL.—COMFORTING
EPPS’S COCOA
.BREAKFAST- -SUPPER.
tiouand nutrition, and by a careful applica;
turn <d the fine properties of well selected Co¬
coa, Mr. Epps has'provided for our break-
lastaac supper a delicately flavored bever¬
age which may save us many heavy doctor’s
cles i ™ of ,v diet '* hj the-jndicious use of such arti¬
that a constitution may be grad¬
ually built up until strong enough to resist
every tle maladies tendency to disease. Hundreds of sub-
attack wherever are floating there around us ready to
Is a weak point. We
may escape many a fatal shaft by keeping
ourselves well ortiiled with pure blood and
frame-[Civil Service
milk. Sold IJ only ? ““P'T ib half boding tins, water by Gro- or
cere, labeled thus: JA31ES pound
btd., Homaepathic Chemists. EPFS & CO.,
Loidoa, Eng.
?IKTENT$
b5 H
s worn In Use
_ —
Royal
Germetuer
Cures
Grippe.
Reliable Evidence.
Rev. W.G.E. Cunnyngham, ed¬
itor Sunday School Literature,
M. E. Church, South, says: “The
‘grippe’ time attacked me a second
last spring. One bottle of
Germetuer relieved rue, as it did
before. I feel entirely free from
all symptoms of ‘la grippe’ at
present.”
Keep flie Bowels Open with Germetuer Pills.
ling’s Royal Germetuer Co.
ATLANTA, GA.
PRICE SO CENTS PER BOTTLE.
net or vAuutu ^formation fiu. < >
G. ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ . . fOR sate BY DRUGGISTS. < >
Health is Wealth !
us. m.v. west’sNkbvkansBbain Tbea.
mext, Dizziness, a guarantees Convnlsions, specific Fits,, for Hysteria, Nervous
neuralgia, Headache Nervous pros¬
tration, caused by the use of al¬
cohol or tobacco, Wakefullness, Men¬
tal Depression, insanity Softening aud of the misery, Brain,
resulting in leading to
decay and death. Premature Old Age, Bar¬
renness, Loss o Power in either sex. Invol¬
untary Losses and Spermatorhiea, caused by
over-exertion of the brain,self abuse or over-
indulgence. *1.00 Each box box, ontams one boxes month lor - ;
treatment. a or six
|5.0C, sent by mail..prepaid on receipt of
price.
WE GUARANTEE SIX BOXES
to cure Any case. With each order received
by us for six boxes, accompanied with $ 5 , 0 <
will send the purchaser cur written guar-
toe to refund the money if the treatment
does not effr-ct a cure. Guarantees issued
only by Dr. E. R. AnthonY, Druggist, Sob
agent, 41 Hill street. Griffin. Ga.
G.A.R.NOTICE
We take this opportunity of informing
opr subscribers that the new Commissioner
of Pensions has been appointed. He is an
old soldier, and we believe tnat soldiers and
their heirs will receive justice at his bands.
IV e do not anticipate that thero will be any
radical changes in the administration of
pension affairs under the new regime.
We would advise, however, that U. 8. sol¬
diers, sailors audtheir hairs, take steps to
make application at once, if they have not
already done so, in order t o secure the benefit
of the early filing of theii claims in case
there should be any futnre pension legisla¬
tion. Such legislation is seldom retroactive.
Therefore it is of great importance that ap¬
plications be filed m the Department at the
earliest possible date.
Il U. 8. Soldiers, bailors, or their Widows,
Children, or Parents desire information in re¬
gard to pontnou matters, they shonld write
to The Press Claims Company, Wash-
ngton, l>. Cl, and they will prepare and
send the necessary application, if they find
them entitled under the numerous laws en¬
acted for their benefit. Address.
PRESS CLAIMS COMPAKY,
John Wedderburn, Managing attorney,
WASHINGTON, D. C.
P. O. Box 886.
COMMERCIAL Prof. A. ». SMITH, Principal ofthi
COLLEGE of KENTUCKY UNIVERSITY
___j-CX INPTON. c£3E RY.. AWARDED THE
riioilk* DIPLOMA
« ker p fa/ ^
A GENTS MAKE Five Dollars a day
XJLselling the greatest Kitchen Utensil ever
invented. Retails for So cents. Two to six
ean be sold in every house. Millions sold in
this country alone. Don’t miss the greatest
opportunity and ever known "to make money,
easily quickly. Sample ssnr, postage
prepaid for five cents. MoMAKIN AGO.,
declttdlm Cincinnati, Ohio.
w* E WANT YOU TO WORK FOR US,
PER thus making $12.00 TO $35.00
PER W EEK. Parties preferred who can.
furnish a horse and travel through theconn
trys erteam though, is not- preos s u ry. A few-
vacanci-s in towns and cities. Spare hours
may be used to good advantage.
B. F. JOHNSON ft fO..
Uth a”d Main Sts.. Richmond, Va.
The first of American Kewpaptrs
CHARLES A. DANA, Editor,
The American Constitution, Spirit the
American These first, ldea,th last, a , and American all the time,
forever.
THE SUNDAY SUN
Is the greatest Sunday News¬
paper m the World.
Price‘5c. a Copy. By mail, $2 a year
Daily, by mall, - - - $6 a year
Daily and Sunday, by mail $8 $ year
, - , - . - ft $y$ar
k
NOTABLE mm
The Last Day of General De¬
bate in the House.
BOUBKE OOOKBAH'S GEEATEPF0BT
Mr. Turner, of Georgia, and Bryan of Ne¬
braska, Delivered Eloquent and Able
Speeches, While the Gifted Irishman
Surpassed Himself in All His Former
Efforts—The Bill Is Being Dissected.
♦ *
Washington, Jau, 15.--Bourko Cock-
fan’s famous Chicago speech will no
longer be accepted as his greatest claim
to pre-eminence as an orator. That
great egprt, which gave him national
prominence, he has surpassed in his bril¬
liant and effective speech on the tariff
bill. Mr. Cockran spoke for an honr
mid a half, and when he had finished he
received such an ovation as has rarely,
if ever, been seen in the house of repre¬
sentatives. For seven minutes the cham¬
ber was in an upro:tr, Democrats chew¬
ing and the galleries joining with tu-
multnous applause.
Chairmad Richardson pounded a hole
in the green baize on his desk in a vain
effort to restore order, bat the londer he
rapped the louder the Democrats cheered
and the continued galleries applauded. bis The chair¬ all
man to The bang gavel, bat
to brought no purpose. standstill, proceedings and Demo¬ were
to a every
cratic member left his seat and moved
in a process.ou up the aisle to congratu¬
late the eloquent New Yorker.
Chairman Richardson thumped and
banged and uvea called his assistants upon the clear ser¬
geant at arms and to
the aisles. But the enthusiastic uproar
continued.
Mr. Cockran was finally requested to
retire to the rear of the hall, aud as he
walked up the aisle with a string of ex¬
ultant Democrats following behind him
there was another wild shout from the
Democrats and a re-echoing round of ap¬
plause from “Vote!” the galleries. “Vote!" from
Cries of came
all parts of the hail, and it seemed as if
the confusion would continue indefinite¬
ly. Back of the rail the big, burly Sen¬ and
ator Coke, from Texas, moved up
threw his arms around Mr. Cockran,
which was the signal for another out¬
burst of enthusiasm.
Mr. Cockran endeavored to make his
way to the cloak room, so that order
could be restored in the house, but his
steps were blocked by jubilant Demo¬
crats, who pressed his hands in congratu
lation. It was a scene that will be re¬
membered for years.
The Day’s Debate.
The closing day of general debate on
the tariff bill will figure as the most
brilliant of the discussion. Three of the
ablest Democratic advocates were on
the card to speak, and the galleries were
thronged to the doors, and even the cor¬
ridors were filled with' long lines of peo¬
ple who had hojied to secure admission.
Ju lge Turner, of Georgia, followed
Mr. Pickier with what was, really, the
first great speech of the day. Mr. Tur
ner made a constitutional argument
against protection, and defended at
length the features df the Wilson bill.
He took occasion to speak at length
about the south’s attitude on the tariff,
and delivered a romarkably strong and
eloquent speech. Mr. Turner had an
exceedingly largo audience, and was ap
plauded enthusiastically throughout his
speech. It was, indeed, a masterpiece
on his part, and elevated him in the es¬
timation of his colleagues.
Mr. Grosvenor, of Ohio, followed
Judge Turner and, following Mr. Gros¬
venor, came Cockran.
Mr. Cockran declared at the start that
he did not share the opinion that the
Wilson bill would add to the treasury
deficiency, and, he contended that, in¬
stead of an increased deficit, it would
operate to bring a surplus into the treas¬
ury such as left by the Democratic party
in 1889.
‘ Mr. Cockran spoke with great elo¬
quence, and when he declared that the
Democratic party was inaugurating a
policy workingmen wjiich, for instead job, of would having furnish two
one
two jobs for one workingman, there was
a wild ghont from the Democratic side
and This general applause in the galleries.
statement furnished the keynote of
Mr. Cockran’s speech.
One of the most effective points made
by Mr. Cockran of Mr. was, in criticising the
contention that this bill would Dingley, of Maine,
if admit *250,000,000
of imports annually it would
just so much contraction of the field of
American labor. Mr. Cockran tried to
pin Mr. Dingley down to this point, but
the Maine statesman endeavored to
evade it by claiming that this statement
alone did not adequately present his ar¬
gument. Mr. Cockran, however, insisted that
he had made that assertion, and he pro¬
ceeded to riddle it, to the great amuse¬
ment of the Democratic side.
Mr. Walker, of Massachusetts, invited
Mr. Cockran’s sharp sarcasm by inter¬
rupting him with a question, which Mr.
Cockran laughingly said he would hear
to “promote the gayety of the discus¬
sion.” This sarcastic fling at the benev¬
olent looking, white haired statesman of
Dedham, Man., provoked uproarious
laughter. plainly rattled,
Mr. Walker was and
when Mr. Cockran confessed that he did
not comprehend had, his the question, house roared and donbt- with
ed if any one
laughter, and Mr. Walker sat down in
his seat crestfallen.
Once Mr. Jockran invited Mr. Reed
into the discussion, bnt the wily and
witty Maine statesman did not accept
the gauntlet. Mr. Cockran’s speech was
by far tne best that has been made.
A Kail road Change.
Macon, Jan. 15.—George B. Turpin
has resigned the presidency of the Geor¬
gia Southern and Florida railroad. The
directors have elected Robert 8. Collins
president. He was secretary, and on
retaryship being elected and president resigned the sec¬
W. S. Goodrich was elec¬
ted secretary.
Now, It’s a Headlight Trust.
Utica, N. Y., Jan. I5.—The certifi¬
cate of incorporation of the United
States Headlight company, with a capi¬
tal stock of *1,500,000, has just boen
filed here. The company is a syndicate
of the headligh t companies of the United
States, and will have its headquarters
here.
How isYour Blood?
I had a malignant breaking out on my leg
below the knee, ami was cured so und and well
with two and medicines a half bad bottlez failed of ISfSCB rAHMl
Other blood
to do me any good. Wnx
q Co., Atlanta, Ga.
-
jE ()]
. iES BETWEEN HIGH
ANO LOW TARIFF,
Not Much Prospect of Settling a Taxed
Question —Disturbance of Valaee and Un¬
settling of Confidence -Time to Call a
Halt—A ConetUuMoual Amendment.
Washington, D. C., Jan. lfl—[Special.]—
After a week of debate on the tariff bill in
the house It is doubtful if any one knows
any more about tha question than be did
Indore. L'he discussion has for the most
part been rather prefunctory and uninter¬
esting. The simple truth Is, and everyone
recognizes It, that the tarifT as a public
question Is becoming more than ever before
a local matter. In Washington there Isa
distinct though perhaps tardy weariness
of the whole question as a national issue.
The men who have spent their lives in mak¬
ing tariff Mils, In discussions of them and
In debate thereon upon the political stump
are free to confess that the further they go
the less they know—the leas clearly do they
see their way.
The frankest of these men on both rides
are ready to admit that the more familiar
they become with the details and effect of
the various laws Imposing customs duties
and their effects upon trade and national
prosperity the lese they are inclined to think
themselves wholly in the right and the
other fellow altogether in the wrong. In
other words, the practical politicians and
legislators of this day, when brought faoe
to face with this great business question,
are able to see but little more than that
there Is a middle ground between high and
low tariffs, between stone wall protection
and out and out free trade, which promises
the best for the country.
Trying to Find the Borders.
The great difficulty which every one feels
is that this middle ground cannot be staked
out. No one knows what its borders are,
where one part of the territory begins and
another ends. Struggle as hard as they
may, after years of effort the brightest and
most honest men in congress find them¬
selves as much in the dark as they were at
the outset. Not one of them would know
just what to do it he were given sole charge
of.the making of a new tariff law. As to
coal or iron or lead or something else, he
might fix the rate jnst to suit one part of
the country, while another would suffer
grievously on account another thereof. What is
one man’s food is man’s poison in
the tariff business.
These facto, which every one has run
plumb up against in his pursuit of this
question, have greatly discouraged a great
many public men. They see the country
in a continual turmoil over the tariff, first
one party and then the other taking power
on account of popular dissatisfaction with
a scheme of taxation, and they can discover
no daylight ahead. tariff Theabsoluteimposribil
ity of making a bill that is just to all
sections of the country and to all business
or consumers’ Interests in it has led more
than one man to adopt the extreme view
that there shoald be no tariff at all. Thera
are men in congress today preaching pro¬
tection and profiting by it politically who
privately say that a scheme of taxation in
which justice is impossible and injustice
inevitable should Ije abandoned aud some¬
thing else put in its place.
These men believe the day is coming
when we shall have free trade in the sense
that Great Britain has it, or, in effect, the
tariff shall cease to be a disturbing influ¬
ence in the realms of commerce aud in¬
dustry, and therefore shall be taken out of
politics. On the other hand, a very large
number of lawmakers who stand nominally
for free trade, or at least lower tariffs, ac¬
tually believe in high protection and lots
of it. They believe it would be ruinous to
the country to drop the tariffs to a point
that would stimulate foreign competition
in our own markets.
An Inceisant Joggling.
Thus we appear to be at a standstill.
There is shifting about as to men and as to
sections of the country, but the net result
is a counterbalance. If any one could see
a prospect of settlement of the question, it
would be more encouraging, but they can’t.
It is first one party and then the other.
When the country rotes to change parties
and presumably policies, it rarely knows
what it wants except that it is discontented
with what is. Amid the general gloom in
which this shuttlecocking of. the tariff
question is shrouded one fact stands out
clear and strong, one tendency in the pub¬
lic mind is vividly reflected in congress and
among the public men of the capital.
Some method must be devised by which
legislation shall be made something be¬
sides » menace to the prosperity of the
country. Frank men of both parties ad¬
mit that any readjustment of the tariff is
bad for the country. It is the uncertainty,
the disturbance of values and unsettling of
confidence that cause the trouble. One party
is as much at fault as the other. The men
who think of country first and party after¬
ward (and there are a few such in Wash¬
ington) say it is time to call a halt.
A tariff commission, a nonpartisan body
to take entire charge of the details of tariff
revision, has been suggested. It would be
hoped in this way to take the question out
of politics. But it is considered doubtful
by the men who have studied this phase of
the problem if that would do It. A tariff
commission of absolute nonpartisanism
and perfect Impartiality jockeying would be impossi¬
ble. There would be for control
ol the commission, just as there was smart
work for mastery of the famous electoral
commission of nearly 80 yean ago.. Be¬
sides, no commission that ever was organ¬
ized or that ever will be created could con¬
struct a scientific and jngt tariff measure,
A Remedy Suggested.
The wisest men we have in congress, who
have studied this matter as the greatest
problem before the American people today
—not the problem whether tariff* shall be
lower or higher, whether Democracy or Re¬
publicanism is best, but hew to secure a
rest from the tariff at least for known pe¬
riods—unite in saying that the only prac¬
ticable method appears to lie in a consti¬
tutional amendment which will forbid re¬
vision of the tariff by a meremajority vote in
either branch of congress excepting during
the life of the congress which sits immedi¬
ately after each federal census. At all other
times the customs schedules could be
changed only by a two-thirds vote in each
branch of ~
congress. amendment ..... ' . . . •__________
This sort of an to thd consti¬
tution would surely prevent tariff changes
on a scale large enough to be menacing to
the prosperity of the country oftener than
once in 10 years. If the country could not
escape the evil altogether, it would get a
rest of half a decade between the spasffb of
change. Then the prosperity of one period
of 10 years could be compared with another,
and when the country voted a party into
power just before the tariff changing year
it would know what it was voting for. It
would havq a chance to choose the party
that bad given it the most prosperity tn its
legislation of the past. In the opinion of
many prominent senators and representa¬
tives, this is what we are coming to.
A remedy which,
If used by Wives
about the painful to experience ordeal
attendant upon
Child-birth, tafaiiibie proves
an fic for.andotmxtes speci¬
the tortures of con-
Uncmeot, ietwening
to bu^raother aiui
on reo<' -
.$UW
BMOrtCLB
'
every the'
pnhifn! and seldom »f
terribls la death, diatmsa? none
to ours nny on for
received, n a box, 8 tor IE Sent by mall.
norantMM Issued by our agents.
GUARANTEES issued only by
N rt 11RBWKY. Urmegist. Griffin,(la
THE COLONEL
CHRISTMAS LIQUORS.
-AT- ’
KavananglTs Place,)
A Fine 8took of
Us, Rums, Hi wi Whiskss,
For the Holiday Trade.
WFlat, Shoals Corn Whiskey a Specialty.
E
I
A
L
I
N-
E
ZODIt A 1100.1 TO LADIES AND
GENTLEMEN. Guaranteed
to enlarge and develop any
part of the body.
Trice *1.00. I’eifectly harmless. Kent by of
mail, sealed in plain wrapper, on receipt
price. Inclose stamp for particulars.
MEDICINE
Tit^'pRVww't-LAi^^c’omr wfiSBaftffly VivTr.
?og/r N ' •
1§? IOK8 *® octrM * D ’wiDOWfe,
•old.er %-
CHILDREN, PARENTS.
duty Also, In tor the ftoldlers and ft*v..oi. Ns* dm
Survivors of regular the Indian Army or Of 1
wars
their widows, bow entitled,
Bend s specialty. for tows. Thousands Mo
new 1
until snecoasf nl.
Complexion Prssanred
DR. HEBRA’S
VIOLA CREAM
frr ? r ‘Z M * p w*:
Sunburn and* TaoTondnJ
•tores the skin to its origi¬
nal freshness, healthy producing a
dear and com-
DRUNKENNESS Or She Ugaw Cared
hy afiBifBfsfsrtBg Habit, Positively
Dr. 1
harmless, whether end the will effect • permanent a
core, patient la a moderate
sa aiooholie wreck. It ha. been strut la
tor SSSSSEESr* the liquor sp&etito to «x»$t.
•srsmBiWK:,
jsaesSlSB IT Tut Htauter Htsnu 1
ITS!
I Mill .wonderful Ivhai.tr will boon cur® sufferers you. A
to
8s5£&r&? sK
otrsi
SUS&SRJBTSS-tSEX BALM
NEW YORK CORRESPOND
SCHDITIAW
w ups a rsswi-.m. wm ■ wwmu
243 BROADWAY FREE
INTRODUCTORY
xpjmssos to a DerstORMfor 1
ENTALINFa THE ONLY
GUARANTEED
CUKE FOR loss of Manhood, Impo Weak
rt-acy, Scmin»l aud Female
uws, N : schf Emissions, Undeveloped Self-Abuse,
aud I,.a ■live Organs. and
Youthful Iudiocr.tions; Insanity
all disease* resulting from sexu¬
al excess. I’riixi *1.00. Bent secure¬
ly packed in plain Full wrapper, particular* ou for re-
teipi, of price.
stamp, MI correspondence strictly
oiifidential.
Acme Medicine Co,,
ATLANTA, GA.
__ _ 1
PRESS CLAIMS
JOHN WEDDERBURN, Managing,
O. Box 463.
------
sf the Iste wsr, pensioned under one Isw. ntsyapply for I
f5rw«Sdiffrom low, only L»to*«W per of disabitmes montt nnAw for the_ wh!
rates under now not on sccm.nl
whether discharged for of disability Black or not. Hawk, . Creek, Cherokee „ _ and . SenriMM* _ ■ .
Survivors, and their widows, the
T “old chrira. completed and settlement obtained, whether pension has bees grunted under
for*U*>'^ndVn?oruuiUon. No charge for advice. No fee nnlcss sncceaafWL
THE PRESS CLAIMS COMPANY,
JOHN WEDDERBURN, Managing Attorney,
B«x4«a WASHINGTON, f|, C.
■ f -fl
1 I Reduced t«m i“ £ - £ if;
! rrn Tne hopum
I v.: JL JL'
I "Tk* Msf 'foil tor Periodicoh, n ^
__
The fe west m— el the world write the Bteretore
el coet em pe rae eo nr activity tor THE FORUM.
I /Thl s reduction In price at once gave TOE FORUM
I the largest circulation ever reached by a periodical el
its class—exceeding all expectations. /
I S Te many thoughtful peep!* the price nt The Forum hes hitherto beeh
hlhttory; Indeed ell the greet Reviews bars been toe high tn pries for the meases
of Intelligent readers. But now the number of renders si Ibowghttnf literature
- men sad women who wish realty to knew whet Is going en In the world e*t-
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raucous activity Is. In fact, the most inter*sting at sit literature,
citizenship implies that a man shaft knew the ept n iaas of tha f
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