Newspaper Page Text
IV'W] Fs ‘' S
DOUGLAS GLESBNKR, Ed. and Pro?
The entire route of the Brunswick
and Birmingham will be op< ned today,
the first Crain to make the throngh trip
tarring Brumwick this morning at 4:40
•’dock.
Curt. Jett baa been sentenced to the
penitentiary for life for the murder of
Marcntn, nnd to be hung for aaaaaainat*
rag Marshall Cockrill. H» deserves
both secten'o s.
The Albany Herald has come to the
conclusion that silly is too weak a word
to describe some of the suggestions for
Democratic presidential possibilities
that are being made.
It is thought that Peter W. Meldrim
will be a candidate for congress in the
First district Should he be nominated,
the house will have one able and eul
iured member, nt least.
Why not Lave some Issues—some
real, live issues—in the election of
members of the general assembly? asks
the Albany Herald. A State board of
tax assessors would m»ke a good
■tarter.
■ a—rw
The fact that a woman is married does
■ot make her any the less a vagrant if
she does not come up to the require
ments of the Calvin vagrancy law, is
the opinion of Recorder Myrick, of Sa
vannah.
The Americus Tim< s-lie order says
the Smith need not worry about Culm
as a competitor in cotton. The stalks
will grow into trees and are fairly well
fruited, but as there are no floats few
of the bolls will be open.
‘■“Separation of the races means moss
grown court houses. There would be
little to do in court and some of the bar
risters would have to heed a call to the
plough," says Editress and Publisbress
Shaver of the Jackson Argus.
All indications point to a most suc
eeeaful and busy winter season for
Thomasville this year. Already tour
ists are beginning to arrive at the dif
ferent hotels, and those places are tak
ing on an a r ot winter activity
Somebody complains in N«w York
about the theatres charging $3 instead
of 11.80 for tickets, ns formerly. The
Bun announces that the reason the
theatres charge $2 for tickets is because
they can get it. They are turning peo
ple away every night as it is.
In view of the fact that so many
government officials have recently been
holdup to the public gaze as corrupt
employes "caught with the goods, ’
the Albany Herald thinks it is not alto
gether inappropriate t > put a new in
terpretation on G. O P —“‘Grafters on
Parade."
—- o
According to the Savannah Press,
llarvie Jordan, ot Jasper county, de
nies Unit he is going to run for congress
in the Eighth district. He even says
that when his present term in the sen
ate expires he is going to retire from
politics and build up the agricultural
interests of the State.
In an address before the Alabama
legislature the other day Senator Mor
gan expressed the bt lit f that the de
bates in the national congress would
reconcile all factious of the Democratic
party and after the party had gotten
together the Democrat! would elect the
■ext presidt nr. Whoth.it man would
be, Senator .Morgan said was not a mat
ter of gieat consideration. He must be
an honest man and a man to represent
the country.
BAVAKNAH PAINS US.
We learn fam tbo Press that
President Roosevelt will be invited
Io attend the fair to bo held in Sa
vannah iu November and to visit
that city socially, and we confess
to great surprise and humiliation
at the idea.
It is all right to atk a Republican
president to visit the Democratic
H uth, if bo be one who bag even a
distant regard for this section as a
part of the common country aver
which bo presides. But to ask such
» uitin i s Roosevt 1;, wiio has done
and is doing his uttermost to out-
Ttgo every iceltDg i.ud coi,v< ntionof
vur '••• dial sys’tm, who believes and
prr aces scoial (quality of the two
ra.es that abide hi re and thereby
encourages and incites unspeakable
crimes, is a violation of the dvceu
cies and amenities of life that we
hud thought Savannah would be the
last city in the State to be guilty of.
It is a poor apology to say, as the
Tress does in its local columns,
though significantly silent on its
editorial page, that this invicuiou
is extended to satisfy an alleged de
sire of Roosevelt to visit the South
and speak to the people in order to
arrive ata better understanding.
Has the example of Charleston been
forgotten, when after visiting lheir
exposition the president went home
and straightway appointed the negro
Crum to be collector of that port?
The people of the South know
President Roooevelt’e aspirations
and ideas pelnty well enough by this
time without seckit g further fra ter
n zitivn, and these whoresniu their
self-respect will condemn this effort
to put them on an eqality with him.
A WORK OF SUPEREROGATION-
According to the Roman Catholic
ohurch, works of supererogation
are those good deeds performed by
the saints more than were necessary
to secure their own salvation. In
tuese degenerate protestant times,
the term has come to mean the per
formance of such things as are none
of the bualneM of the performer.
Either way you look at it, the term
applies to the proposed action of
Chairman Turner, of the prison
oom mist ion, in going around and
nforming the different . counties
what a great mistake they are mak
ing in taking advantage of the re
ceipt law to put convicts on on the
public roads, thereby interfering
with the present convict system, ot
which he is supreme boss.
We have no criticism to make
upon Judge Turner for making such
an address in his own county of
Putnam, but when he goes outside
of tfyht and sets bimself up all over
the State as the opponent of the
tutJonty of the legislature and the
demands of the people, aud the one
poison who knows anytuiug about
the proper public policy and the dis
position of the convict question, it
begins to look like a matter of pre
sumption as well as assumption.
li must be remembered, however,
that Judge Turner’s term for re
election comes up next year and
that opposition has been expressed
nut only to the present commission
ers but to the commission itself. It
may be, therefore, that he is look
ing as much to his own salvation as
to the salvation of the counties that
propose to improve their highways
by couv.ot labor at the expense of
the school fund.
IN WHOM OUR INTEREST CENTERS-
Tnere may be seasons of the year
when the world may be a little
mixed in its conception of the true,
valuation of men and things ; but
just at this particular tim ß , the
middle ot September, everybody
everywhere is agreed that the most
important person in all civilization
is the American farmer,
It is remarkable, says the Augus
ta Herald, how the importance of
this member cf society grows and
grows as the time for harvesting of
the fall crops approaches. All crea
tion is far more solicitous over his
welfare than over the possible ru
mor o' the assassination of the Czar
or th< 1 j mise of the king of England.
Statv on know that upon the suc
cess or failure of the American
farmer depends the balance of trade ;
railroad magnates know ruin is
threatened if the farmer gives him
no large crops to ship; the packing
house owners realize how depend
ent is their supply of beef upon this
American king in his own right;
and the merchants all study his
welfare before ordering their fall
goods.
For the farmer is the wealthiest
person in the world.
"The aggregate value of the prod
ucts of all farms of the country,”
said A. B. Stickney in a recent ad
dress’, "in the census year 1900 was
14,736.118,000 —an aggregate in
come sufficient to purchase tie
enormous bond atd stock issues of
the huge steel trust in the first two
months of the year ; ail the stock of
the Standard Oil trust at 700, which
is about its market value, in the
next two months; all the
stock of the m nor trusts in
the next two months; to buy
all the national banks in the next
t .vo incnths ; to p'sy the bonded debt
of the government in the next two
months ; io retire the greenbacks in
le s then one mouth, and still have
about $500,000,000 left- over.”
To use a pertinent slang phrase,
the American farmer comes pretty
close to being "it," nor is ha at all
likely to lose his prestige t his year.
The aggregate value of the coun
try'« products front farm, field and
pluntatk n will reach this year, we
are assured, the enormous sutu of
$5,000,000,000. Os their corn will
be shout $1 500.000,000; wheat
$355,00 ,000 ; o »ts $250,000,000 ; bay
and cotton, <530.000,000 each ; while
rye, barley, buckwheat, potatoes
at d minor agricultural products
will make up the gigentic total.
«t — • —— —
A CAMPAIGN BUTTON-
The first campaign but on has
already appeared in Chicago. It
represent*tho President and Booker
T. Washington at lunch together.
Negro men have been the first to
wear i», and it is said many are seen
with it adorning the lapels of their
crats. One description of the but
ton says it depicts the president
and the negro at a small dinner
table, presumbably in the White
House. The colored man is seated
at Roosevelt’s right and his hand Is
rtnling upon the table. Both sur
vey a coffee service, water bottle
and napkins, and are awaiting the
arrival of the first course. The one
word, "Equality," apoears in bold
letters across the f ice of the badge
Whether this button will meet
with the approval of the Republi
can campaign committee and the
president remains to be seen, but it
unquestionably represents the pres
ident's views, and the motto is
correct so far as be and Book
er are concerned. The latter
might feel inclined to resent it, but
is too politic to do so.
These are the things that make
the race problem acute and are all
the fault of the strenuous maniac
whom an unkind providence has
placed in the white house.
THE FAITH OF THE SITTING HEN-
Perhaps in away there is nothing
more heroic than a female fowl try
ing to hatch something from noth
ing. The old gray goose will sit for
mouths on a stone, after being rob
bed of her eggs, vainly hoping to
educe a bevy of goslings from the
impassive material. Aud the hen
is equally persistent and plucky
She will hover for weeks and weeks
over a discarded knoo, looking
gladly forward to the day she will
bring forth therefrom a fluffy fam
ily. If men had the faith of an or
dinary mongrel hen they could do
miraclfs No Christian martyr ever
showed more persistence and blind
faith than "Old Spec,” when the
fever of spring gets to working in
her blood, and the mutex Dal instinct
takes a firm hold ot her entire
being. Does any other creature e±-
hibit such blind faith and trust and
hope under discouraging circum
stances? In ancient times mighty
things were performed by faith and
belief, but there is not in the whole
world, ancient or modern, a more
sublime example of thia quality
than that given by the sitting hen.
The hired man—vicious and ugly
after a night at dancing—may hurl
her from the feed box of one of the
horses : the boss may "damn the
setting bens, anyway,” bat she will
creep back after a little of blusteiv
mg and jawing and shaking out her
feathers nestle down among the
corn cobs, hoping, doubtless, there
by to hatoh out a field of yellow
dsns Gods of our fathers, if we
had the divine faith of the brindle
sitting hen, we would go forth
healing the sick and halt, end giv
ing the blind back their eight.
A NEW APPLICATION OF THE CAL
VIN LAW-
A great deal of discussion has
been created by Reverend John S.
Moore’s suggestion, during a recent
church service in Oxford, that
Emory college should adopt the Cal
vin Vagrancy law, requiring each
studei.t tostudy or have him suffer
a fine or expulsion.
According to a special report in
the Augusta Herald, Mr. Moore says
that a student is supposed to be
working on books at a college or
university and when he fails to do
this, he is nothing elae than a va
grant, and that the law should be
applied equally to all. Whether or
not the law can be so applied is a
much mooted question, and one that
is receiving a great many answers.
There can be no doubt but that if
the faculty of Mercer or any other
college should adopt such a law,
there would be a far more regular
attendance upon classes and lectur
es and a consequently higher aver
age at examination time.
Aud how beneficial would be the
law if it were carried still further!
says the Herald. It might be ap
plied at times to church congrega
tions who should be workers in the
vineyard but who profess them
selves vagrants by staying* away
from the Sunday morning or even
ing services. Then there are peo
ple who will not go the polls and
vote even whan they know that
every name added to a list ados one
more atone to the wall seme scanty
few are attempting to erect against
a threatened invasion of municipal
ri y. Again there is this mat
ter of some mass meeting < ailed
together for t-ho accomplishment of
a certain great good for the citv.
It is the positive business of every
reputable ci’izen to attend sucii
meetings, and consent to fierrs on i
committees appointed, etc., and a <
xefusal to so serve should be punish- •
able under the vagrancy law. i
These are onlv a few of the many , ■
ways in which Mr. Moore’s eugges- |
ti«n might be i xiended and the Cal- i
vin me isure made even more inval
uable than it has already proven i
itself.
<■ — i
TWO DIFFESEN PERIO D - i
Recently t-x-Governor Northen,
of this S’ ate, in diecu-sing the race
question, paid the m-gro a very
high tribute, denounced mob law,
and declared the plan of the Hon.
John Temple Graves for the depor
tation of the negro to be impossi
ble. Among ether things, he said :
“•I have lived among negroes all
my lite, and I don’t want to live
where there are none I will trust
them in every relation far more
confidently than I would the
mongrel population of self-an
nounced socialists, anarchists and
outlaws who do the menial
service of other sections. We
do not want to deport the ne
groes, and we could not if we so de
sired."
The Richmond Fimes-Dispatch
makes some very timely comment
upon this as follows :
"Good Mr. Northen, like some of
the balance of us, is getting along
in years. He is talking about the
old negro of long ago, the dear old
‘mammies’ and the noble old ‘uncles'
that we older folks of the South
knew so well and loved so tender
ly. ‘Trust them in every relation,’
certainly we would ; trust them
with the lives of our loved and <’ -
pendent ones. God bless th> x.
memory forever more.
••But. alas, they ere too fast be
coming a memory only. The old
‘mummies’,the old ‘aunties’ and the
old ‘anoles’are fast passing away,
and soon there will be none of them
left And when they are all gone
and their influence shall have pass
ed away with them, what will be
come of the new generation of ne
groes, God only knows.”
Chairman Turner Takes the Stump.
Savannah Press.
The prison commission seems to
have oomtnencad „ a campaign of
education in the State. Judge Joe
Sid Turner made a speech yesterday
in Eatonton, his old home, in which
he defended the convict system in
Georgia and incidentally condemned
the new methods of putting short
term convicts at work on the public
roads.
Judge Turner is from Putnam and
is deservedly popular there. He is
an excellent gentleman, an able
man, and stands high in official cir
cles in Atlanta. Judge Turner,
however, should remember that the
effort to reform the convict system
in Georgia is not necessarily an at
tack upon the prison board. The
Press is one of those who believes
‘Wat the prison board is composed of
good men, who are doing what they
can to improve the convict lease,
but who are hampered by the condi
tions of an old law which sought to
fasten upon the people another five
years’ lease system. For this rea
son we regarded with favor every
effort on the part of the present leg
i-Uture to improve that system. We
realized that the convicts were be
ing leased to private parties at a
very low rate and that the lessees
were making about SI,OOO a month
in Atlanta at the expense of the
State. The Press believed that if
this money could be cleared by the
lessees it oould be cleared by the
State. For this reason it called for
reform, not only in figures, but m
methods.
We do not wish to take issue with
Judge Cutner in bis address to bls
home people in Eatonton, but cer
tainly that gentleman will agree
with us that no leasing of convicts
which places the convicts beyond
the power of the State to punish
should be tolerated for a moment.
The power to punish for crime is a
sovereign power, and as far as pos
sible the convicts should be main
tained under the care and control of
the State itself. The Press wel
comed the present law, althoughit
was no* an entire change from the
oldsyt'in. It was a beginning in
that 1 n ,i. It was a return of a part
of the short term felony convicts to
the control of the county, which is
a part of the State, and was the rec
ognition of a valuable principle.
The fact that "the states of Ohio,
Indiana, Pennsylvania, Massachu
seets, Maryland and California se 1
the labor of their convicts to private
bidders and have no different or bet
ter s - stem in Georgia” does not
alter the case There have been
grave abuses in the Georgia system
and charges of cruelty and gross
mismanagement have crept into it.
We trust that the prison comm s
sion will nos oppose the system of
the counties putting their short
term convicts on the public toads.
This, too, is u step in the right di-
rection. It may be that Putnam j ,
county oould not work those con
victs to advantage. But there are
o'hers which would employ them
with profit. We had understood in 1
Atlanta that the prison commisaio
did not oppose the plan of putting
the convicts on the road Bat the ’
announcement is made that Chair
man Turner of the prison commis
sion is going to take the stump, pre
sumably in opposition to the plan.
We believe the new system would
develop better roads In Georgia and
would not materially hurt the
schools.
Information That the Taxpayer is
Entitled To.
Milledgivllle Newx.
In severnl ot our exchanges we
sae regularly the reports of county
commissioners meeting in neighbor
ing counties, with an itemized
statement of receipts and disburse
ments. To every citizen iu the
county this not only makes inter
esting reading, but it is information
that each tax payer is entitled to.
Aud it is the duty of the board
of oommtssionais to furnish
the information to at leas*
one of the county napers everv
month. We have made this point
before and would like to reluctate
it often enough to impress tnejruih
on the honorable board.
AddingZthe Name of Grantland.
Macon News.
The Griffin News wants to know if
Macon must always furnish the con
gressman from the Sixth district. We
are aware of no good reason why it
should not, but friend Glessner can
take consolation and hope from the fol
lowing answer, in the Savannah Press,
to his inquiry: "Not always. The
time will come when Marcus Berk and
Jim Flynt will be in line of promotion."
The Press might alto have added the
name of Seaton Grantland and thus
had a trio of excellent congressional
timber.
against mo
TEXAS QUARANTINES
Drsaded Yil.ow Jack Renort
to Have Appeared.
CITY IS PRACTICALLY ISOLATED.
At Neuevo Laredo It Is Reported that
Six New Cases Have Developed.
Railroads Instructed To Sell No
Tickets to Points North.
Laredo, Tex., Sept. 26. —Information
coming from Dr. Mariano Trevino
the yellow fever expert, who is con
ducting affaire in Neuvo Laredo, is
given out from an authoritative source
to the effect that six cases ot
genuine yellow fever has developed
In that city.
The situation in Laredo is unchang
ed.
Dr. Tabor announced that the entire
state of Texas has now quarantined
against Laredo and that /he railroads
have been instructed to sell no tickets
to points north.
This action practically isolates this
stricken city.
TWO LIVES LOST IN FIRE.
Hotel Brunswick at Rochester, N. l-1.,
Is Destroyed.
Rochester, N. H., Sept. 25.—Two
Uvea were lost and several person’
injured in a fire that destroyed Hote!
Brunswick early today. The dead:
George Harwood, of Concord.
Mrs. Harwood, his wife.
The injured:
George McHugh, back sprained.
WllMam McHugh, injury to leg.
C. W. Page, slightly injured.
aud Mirs. Harwood occupied
a room on the second floor and were
In the corridor where they had fmet
death while attempting to escape from
the 'flames.
The two McHughes jumped from
the second story window and landed
on the roof of an adjoining building.
An unknown man jumped from a
third story window and landed on the
wires »f the street railway.
The monetary loss is about $14,000.
The llosie of the Future.
time," says'Professor H. Marlon of
the United States Naval academy, "talk
ing machine dlsk« will take the place of
text books. Paper backed novels will dis
appear, and instead of reading printed
books the litterateur will only have to put
a disk in his machine and have the novel
read to him In the living voice of Its cre
ator."]
At evening, when the lamps are lit.
Our home Is one of peace;
About the phonographs we sit
And all our troubles cease.
The whirling disk at mother’s ear
Is telling how to cook.
And father's trying hard to hear
"The Great Campaign of Crook."
The baby turns on Mother Goose;
The older sister sighs
When Lady Clare, with no excuse.
Through one whole chapter cries.
The Loj-s are hearing pirate scenes
Os skull and bones end dirk;
Th*» younger girls have magazines
That warble fancy work.
The medley comes: "Set cn the stove
And simmer half a day—
Tl-.e enemy's tn yor.d, l *■ .ve—
lii3 name Is Dapple Gray.
Alas, my lover loves tr. not!
Embroider tills in gre.-n;
Now rake their sides with solid shot!
With silk fl «s in b.tw en."
And "Mary had a little lamb-
Feel with a ki’ci. n knife—
Tbi C'.’ldiov -tar of Amstcrdam-
I e. mj cwn. r.» 1
Whar.-vcr Crock took ths command--
The Lamb was sure to go"-
O - t-1 -rrand;
The cl? ;t have run e it so.
—Chicago Tribune.
Over - vi
Your KidneySeJ
qnhealthy Ware I
All the blood in your body passes thrtg® ■ -
blood I
) ter out the |>
I impurities in j
If they a:
of order, thcl|® K
their work. ■■ # ®
ra
matism r W
Lbcd, due®Jgj !
• i ■ — .- fra ra a
kidney trouble.
Kidney trouble causes qulmMf 1 I
heart beats, and makes I
;hcy had heart trouble, 1
over-working in pumpin■
rcL-.one i blood through MRj. .y!
' it used to be considered that
troubles were to be traced to
but now m >dern science proves
all constitutional diseases nave
ning in kidney trouble.
If you are sick you can make no
by first doctoring your TheWgg|
and the extraordinary effect o. Dr.
Swamp-Root, the great kidney
soon realized. It stands the highest for WKv
wonderful cures of the most distressing
and is sold on its merits
by all druggists in fifty- 1
cent and one-dollar siz-|
es. You may have a
sample bottle by mail
free, also pamphlet telling you howGo »J
out if you have kidney or bladder
Mention this paper when writing Dr.
8c Co.. Binghamton, N. Y.
Don't make any mistake
member the name. Swamp-R°ot«Bß7
Kilmer’s Swamp Root, and the anarwra
Binghamton, N. Y., on every bottle. |g
ORDINARY'S ADlßlfflia
Ordinary's Offire, Spalding
Georgia, September 7, 1903-R ibrfrt *»
I) mlel, admluiitritor of Jas. s.
deceased, makes application for ItTKve
sell two tract.- of laud, lying in AtrhJ
district, Spalding county, Georgia*©™
tract containing one hundred
acres ot laud, known as the Lucite
place, end one trart containing sevifit AM
acres of land, known as the
place; five shares of stock of th > BushtoM
Cotton Mills; two shares of stock of thra
High Shoals Factory. Also a lot o«
law books. To be sold for the put J
pr>se of paying debts »nd disfriAutioira
among the beirs of deceased Let all per-J
sods concerned show cnuse, if any
be, before the court of ordinary in
(4a., on the first Monday in CctmW
m xt, by 1<» o'clock a. in., why saiu appM
cation should not be granted , ■
J. A DREWRY. 1
OrclnarrU- 1
Ordlna-y’s Offic 1 , Snaldlng Counttra
Ge’Tgia,September 7,1903—D. G.ThomMM
deceased, administrator of I) A . TtionmM
makes application for leave to se.rl two!
hundred and fifty-three acres of iandJ
more or less, loca’ed in Orrs
■•piJd'ng county, Gecrgia, bounded
the north by land <’.f J A- Scott,,
ea t by public road leading irocu 31|.
road o Flank read, on the south by landra
of W. R Thomas and on the west bra
'rinds of J. T. Freeman and Bo't. Ira
Daniel, known as the D A. TbcmaM
home place To be sold for the purpose
of paying debts of deceased and dlsQ’ibura
tlou. Let all persons concerned showj
came, It any there be, before the « art ora
ordinary in Griffin, (4a., on theflrst Monra
day October next, by ten o’clock a. m.fl
why said »p jllcation should not, be gVaat-W
ed., J. A. DREWRY, 1
Ordinary
Ordinary’s Office, Georgia, S ’oldinra
County, September 7,19 h8 — Com-T
intssioners appointed to set apart twelve!
months’ su t .pors to Mrs W B. Hud4
son and her two minor children havfn®
performed their duty and filed ihe)«
report in th's office; Let rll
(oiicerned show cause before the'conira
of ordinary at ordinary’- office iu Or Ultra
(4a . by ten o’clock a on first McnoAj
in Oitob-rnex , vhy such report s' oubx
not be made the judgment of tbe rouraß
J. a. UREA'UY,«
GEOrt'.ii a — Spalding County.
To A 1 Whom n May Concern:
Brown having, in proper form, WJ>pl|B
m mi-for permanent letters »t
tion on the estate or. Mrs. Leola BrowH
late of saiu county, this is to cite iB
and singular the creditors and next ofl
kin of Mrs Leola Brown to be atfl
apoear at my office in G -iffin, Ga . on thra
first Monday in Octobi r next by Un o’clocra
a tn., and to show came, if any they can]
why permanent administration
not be granted to B B. Brown IB
Mrs. Leo a Brown’s estate. Witnera
mv hand and official signature, th J
7th day of September 1903. »
J A. DREWRY, ■
Ordinary,®
JHB
Administrator’s
By virtue of an order granted py fra
Court oi Ordinary, of Spalding
Georgia, at tne September term
said court, will be sold before the couH
house door in the city of Guffir.
county, Georgia, on the first
October, 19< 3, between the legal
sale, the following described
longing to the esta’-e of John K. DuktS
deceased, to wit ; Three hundred and tea
(310) acres of land in Akins dletrlqr
Spalding county, Georgia, boundra
on the north by Miss Annie Wise aaß
J. B. Bell, on the cast by Wellmaker
Akin, on the south by W. W. Duke
Mrs. Joe Duke and on the west b®
Ogletree, G, W. Maddox and T. J. BiraH
rsatd land located in Akins iljstii®
Spalding county, Georgia, and
ttehome place of said John E Lak®
deceased >old to pa; debts of deraaeera
and icr distri; ulit n. Terms of sa'raLmnß
M. A. DUraK®
Administrator of estate of John K.
deceased.
BLAKELY & ELLI
■■ v ■>'
Funcra. 3irccto®
All gr-.des cloth-covered.
i%O' t'Jof’ius end Cai-kets Pron-pt
•irefnl attention. Free Beane. <ra®
ring’sand 11 derai’s attended to. rara
baiming on rasonable terms. Calls fd
sdezeu day and night. ■
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