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THE LUMPKIN INDEP1NDEN {
By BENJAMIN W. KEY.
YOL. XII.
Published every Saturday Morning
HY
BENJAMIN W. KEY.
T B It M S :
ONE YEAH........ *1,50.
-IX MONTHS... .. ’ync.
Kates ol‘ Advertising.
One Inch one ineortion... 100
Each subsequent insertion 50
One inch, one month.... bs
One inch, three months.., cn
One inch, six months----- <1
One inch, twelve months. 10 00
One quarter column, one month..... 6 00
Oua quarter column twelv* months 36 Oy
One half column, one month 10 0 -'
One half celaum twelve months..... GO 00
One column one month... 15 00
Une column t elve months 100 to
All bills for advertising are due at
any time upon presentation after
first appearance of advertisement.
Address ail letters to The Lumpkin Inde
rUNDENT, O. W. a. KEY,
‘Vi Proprietor.
(JH Alt LION E. BATTLE,
Attorney At Law,
Office witbPEABODY & BRANNON
COLUMBUS, GA.
Will practice in Stewart Superior
Court.
Columbus, Ga, August 4th. tf
E. G. SIMMONS,
ATTORNEY AT LAW
AMER1CU3, GA.
Will practice in all the counties of
Tbi* Judicial Circuit, in the Supreme
Court ef the State of Georgia, and
in the District Court of the United
States, snd in ail other courts by
special .contract july23-8l.
WELLBORN F. CLAltKE,
Attorney at Law,
Lumpkin, Georgia.
Will practice in Stewart Courty.
Special attention given to collections.
LumpLin, Ga., May 5, 1883.
LEONiDLS McLESTEB,
At torn e / at Law,
Cusseta, Georgia
Will practice in tho Courts of the
Chattahoochee Circuit and in Stew¬
art Superior Court. Special atten¬
tion given to collections.
Cusseta, Ga., May 6, 18' 3.
MEDICAL CARD.
J. E. & W. P. CARTER,
Having associated themselves together in
ths practice of Medicine in its various
branches respectfull solicit the patronage
of all. The senior partner of the above
firm feels grateful to the public for their
liberal patronage m the pa.t and ask that it
be cont nned.
"MSS LITTLEJOHN.”
t Savannah Weekly News
OF OCTOBFR 13th, 1883,
. XVill cent in the opening chapters of a new
.•rial, by Miss Eleanob M. Jones, of North
Carolina, entitled .
“MISS LITTLEJOHN.”
: I - The plot of this interesting channel story runs
1 smoothly along and fhe in reader an even becomes of quiet
I interest, so much
in love with the pure, unselfish character of
f Miss Littlejohn that he forgets to look for
/ startling events and becomes wholly absorb
l «d in the development of the noble purpos
f *s and plans of the heroin*.
The Savannah Weeki* News is a mam
| | moth sheet, contains 8 pages of reading maj
fcr, comprising all the news ot the week,
I ’ gii, (special attention being given to the Geor
Dispatches Florida and South the Carolina,) hour of Telegraph going
ic np to to
press, Agricultural Items, Original Serials,
l
In addition to a first-class newspaper, we
t offer to each yearly subscriber a copy of any
li L of the pnblished novels of the Mousing:
News Libbab x fret.
I I Subscription—Weekly, in advance, 82 a year ; Daily
I New*. $10,
|\ 6 a b criptions and Postmaster.., can be sent through Local
Aa« t or diced to
3 ’Vlitakeb J SxBBrr, H. ESTILL,
SyvannaH.
Farmer* and others desiring a genteel,
uorative agency business, by which $5 o
$20 a day can be earned, send address at
once, on postal, Fulton to H. C. Wiekinson A Co.,
195 and 197 Street, New York.
Dec. 23rd-1882-tilu.
LUMPKIN, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1883,
THE DAYOFBESl’.
Holy and beautiful ! The very bird
Thfttpouishie weed :h of music on tlieear
Seems, to our chastened hearts, by wor¬
ship stir ed.
To {my his tribute to the season dear.
The breezes puss us by with loitering wing
And less distiuct the insects’ joyful hum;
Fainter the voices of the gurgling spring.
And nil proclaims the welcome lost
hath come.
The Sowers hang droopiugly on pliant
Stem,
The pule, thin clouds float down the
azure sea
With gentlest motion; and tie heart,like
them.
Fain would go forth, sinless, and calm,
and free 1
All things without do utter “holy time,”
And all w ithin the soul gives answering
cheer ;
The burden of el grief, and c.ire, and
rriino
Is vailed from sight, it cas's no shadow
here.
Into llio dt ep recesses of the mind,
O holy peace, descend and long abide i
Till a perpetual Sabbath there enshrined
Sheds guiding ays across life's ebbing
tide 1
—Boston 1 ran script.
THE BAD BOY.
“What you sitting theie for half
an hour for, staring at vacancy?”said
the grocery man to Ibe bad boy,as l.e
sat on a stool by the stove one of
these foggy mornings, with his fin¬
gers clasped around his knee, look¬
ing as though he did not know
enough to go to bed. “What are you
thinking about any way?”
"I was wondering where you would
have betn to day if Noah had ruu h ; s
ark into such a fog as this, and there
bad been no foghorn on Mount Ararat
and he had passed by with his excur¬
sion and not made a landing, and
had floated around on the freshet un¬
til all the auimaft starved, and the
ark had struck a saag and burst a
hole in her bottom. I tell you, we
can ail congratulate ourselves that
Noah happened to blunder on that
high ground. If that ark had been
lost, either by being foundered, or
being blown up by Fenians because
Noah was an Englishman, it would
have been cold work trying to pop¬
ulate this world. In that case another
Adam and Eve would have to be
made out of dirt and water, and they
m'gltt have gone again, and failed (o
a so a family, aud where would we
have buen. I tell you when I think
of the narrow escape we have had it
is a wonder to uie that wc have got
along as well as we have.’’
“Well when did you get out ol the
asylum,” said the grocery man who
had been stf-nd n» back with opcu
mouth looking at the boy as though
he was crazy. “What you want is to
have your head soaked. You are get¬
ting so you reach out too far with
that small mir.d of yours. In about
another year you will want to run
this world yourself. I don’t think
you are reformed much. It is wicked
lor a boy of your size to nrgue about
such things. Your folks better send
you fo college.”
“What do I want to go to college
for, and be a heartless hazer, and
poor base ball player. I can be bad
enough at home. The more I read
tho more I think. I don’t believe I
can ever be good enough to go to
heaven, any way, and I guess I will
go into tho newspaper business,
where they don’t have to be good and
where they have passes everywhere.
Do you know, I think when I was
built they left out a cog wheel or
something ia my head. I cunt think
like some boys. I get to thinking
about Adam and Eve in the Garden
of EdeD, and of the dude with the
cloven hoof that flirted with Eve, and
treated her and Adam to dried ap¬
ples, and I can’t think of them as
some boys do, with a fig leaf poli
naise, and fig leaf vest I imagine
them dressed up ia the latest style.
I know it is wrong, but tbat is what
a poor boy has got to suffer who has
an imagination, and where did I get
the imagination? This confounded
imagination of mine shows me Adam
with a plug hat on jnct like our min¬
ister wears and a stand up collar,
and tight pants, and peaked toed
shoos and Eve is pictured to me with
a crushing angleworms-colored dress
and brown-stripe 1 slockiogs, and
newspapers in her dress to make it
A Weekly Newspaper, Published ia the Political, Social and Agricultural Interests of Stewart County.
set out, and a hat with dandelions
an, a >d a red parasol, and a lace
handkerrlvef, which she pnts to her
lips and winks with her left eye to
the masher who is standing by the
corner of the house in nu attitude,
while the tail with the dart ou the
end is wound around the rain water
barrel, so Eve won’t see it and get
scared. Say, don't you think it is
better for a boy to think of our first
parents with clothes ou than to think
them almost naked, exposed/to the
inclemency of the weather, with
nothing but fig leaves pinned on?
I wftut to do right, as near as 1 can
but I had rather think of them dress¬
ed like our folks are to day, than to
think of them in a cyclone with leaves
for wearing apparel. Say it is wrong
to fight, but don’t you think if Adam
had put ou a pair of boxing gloves
whdn be f-mr.d the devil was getting
too fresh about the piece, and knock¬
ed him out in a couple of rounds, and
pasted him in the nose, and fired him
out in summer garden, that it would
have been a big thing for this world?
‘ Leokahear,” said the grocery man
who had been looking at the boy in
dismay; “you had better go right
home and let your ma. fix up some
warm drink for yon and put you to
bod. You are all wrong in the head
and if you are not attended to ou
will have brain fever. I tell you, boy
you are in danger. Come I will go
home with you.’
‘Oh, danger nothin’, I am just tell¬
ing how things look to a boy who
has not got the facilities for being
too good in his mouth. Some boys
cau take things as they read them,
and not think any for themselves ;
I am a thinker from Thiukarsville,
and my imagination plays the dick¬
ens with me. There is nothing I
read about old times but I c >wp»re
it with the same line of business at
the present day. Now, when I think
of ‘the fishermen of Gallilee ; draw¬
ing their seines, I wonder what tils*
would have dope if there hud been a
law against hauling seines, as there
is in Wisconsin to day, and I can
see a constable with a wnrrunt for
the ariosi of the Galilee fishermen,
snatching the old apostles and tak¬
ing them to the police station in a
patrol wagon. I know it is wroDg
to think like that but bow can I
help it. Say, supposo those fisher
men had been out hauling their
seines, and our minister should come
with bis good clothes on, bis jointed
rod, ■ his nickle plated reel, and his
silk fish line, and his patent fish
hook, and put a frog oa his hook
and cast his line near the Galilee
fishermen and go to trolling for
bass ? What do you snppose the
lone fishermen of the Bible times
would have thought about the gall
oi the jointed rod fishermen ? Do
you suppose they would have thrown
stones in the water wheie he was
trolling or would they have told bim
that there was good trolling around
a point about a half mile up the
shore where they knew hH wouldn’t
get a bite in a week, the way a fel¬
low at Muskego lake lied to our min¬
ister a spoil ago ? I tejl you, boss,
it a sad thing for a boy to have an
imagination,’ and the boy put bis
otber knee in the sling made by the
clenched fingers of both hands, and
waited for the grocery man to argue
with him.
‘I wish you would go away from
here: I am afraid of you,’ said the
grocery man. ‘I would give anything
if your pa or the minister would come
in and have a talk with you. Your
mind is wandering, and the grocery
man went to the door and looked up
and down the street to see if some¬
body wouldn’t come in and watch the
crazy boy, while he went to break¬
fast.
‘Oh, pa and fhe minister can’t
make a first payment on me. Pa
getB mad when I ask questions, and
tbe minister thinks I am past re¬
demption. Pa said yesterday that
baldness was caused, in every case,
by men’s wearing plug hats, and
when I asked bim where tbe good
Elijah (whom the boys called ‘go np
old bald bead,’ and the heart had a
free lunch on them), got hie plug
hat. pa eaid school was dismissed,
and I could go. When the minister
was telling me about the good Elijah
going up through the clouds is a
chariot of fire, and I asked the min¬
ister wlmt he thought Elijah would
have thought if he mot our Sunday
school Superintendent coming down
through tbo clouds on a bicycle, he
put bis baud on best! and said my
liver was all wrong. Now, I will
leave it to yen if there was anything
wrong -about- that. Du you know
what I think is the most beaatiful
thing in tbo Bible V
'No, I d!»n’t, r said tbs grocery man,
‘and if voh want to tell it T will lis¬
ten just five minateB, and then I am
going to shut up the store and go to
breakfast. Yon make me tired.’
‘Well, I think the finest thing is
that story about the prodigal son,
where the boy took all the money he
could scrape up and went out West
to paint the towns red. He spent
his money in riotous living got full
of benzine, and stuck all the gang of
toughs, both male and female,and his
stomaoh went back on him, and he
had malaria, and finally he get to be
a oow boy, herding hogs, and had to
eat husks that the hogs didn’t want,
HDd got pretty low down. Then he
thought it was a pretty good scheme
to be getting around home, where
they had throe meals a day, and
spring mattresses, and he started,
home boating bis way on the trains,
and he didn’t know whether the old
mau would receive him with open
arms or pointed boots, but the old
man came dewn to the depot to meet
him and right there, before the pass¬
engers and the conductor and the
brakemen, be wasn’t ashamed of his
boy, though ho was ragged, and
looked as though he had been on the
war path, and the old man fell on
his neck and wept and took him
home in a hack and had a voal pot
pie for dinner. That's what I call
sense. A good msny men now days
would have the police on the tramp
and'had him ordered out oU town
What! you going to close up the
store ? Well, I will see yon later. I
want to talk with you something
that is weighing on my mind,’ and
the boy got out jast in time to save
bis coat-tail from being caught in
the door, and when the grocery rnr.n
came back from breakfast be foand
a sign in front, ‘This store is closed
till further notice.— Shereff.’ — Peck'a
Sun.
It Was Certainly New.
A few weeks ago we saw a man
get up in a chnrch and heard him
tell how he had been converted and
blessed by his loving Heavenly Fath¬
er. Last Saturday we sat at our of¬
fice desk, when the same man ap¬
proached us and said : ‘I owe you
some money for your paper and want
to pay yon.’ ‘Where did you get it?’
We took down onr subscription book
run over tbe names and failing to
find it we asked : ‘When did you
get it?’ ‘Five or six years ago,’he
replied. We then referred to old
books that haa been laid aside for
several years and found bis name
stricken with three dollars standing
against him. He remarked as we
banded bim a recept in full: ‘I am
glud to got it off my mind.’ Here
was a practical result of change of
heart. Religion will make a man re¬
member and pay his debts. After
all, genuine practical common sense
religien is the great need of the
country. It will not only adjust all
small differences between individuals
but it will solve difficult problems in
business and politics.—-Union ana
Recorder.
Transporting flowers in Potatis —
A gentleman from home who wished
to send some beaut.f il flower-bads
to his wife wxs at a loss how to do
so. A florist friend said he would
fix them. He cut a potato into two
pieces and bored neles in them, into
which he inserted tbe sterna of the
buds, and placed them in a box with
cotton to aupport them. A latter
from the recipient acknowledged the
remembrance aild said tbat tbe buda
had developed into full blown flow¬
ers. There is sufficient moisture ib
a gosd-siSed potato to support a
flower for two weeks ifi a moderately
cool temperature. Flowers from bou
qneU or basket, . « , may beipres.fd . „ _ , in .
the same way. Tbe potatoes may be
hidden by leaves or moatea.
Jerry Green In gs’ Saying-s.
Homes, nowadays, seems t’ be
simply places wbar tb’ brats her tber
own way 'bout everything, and wliar
married men go when they can’t find
no other place t' set round in.
It’s poor policy fer a man t’ want
borrow money on th' plea that h’s
extremely poor.
Ef time is money, they’s a good
many people has nure money than
they know what to do with, I reckon
I claim it's sheer nonsense lor a
man to teach his servants t’ lie far
bim, an’ thqn blame ’em when they
lie fer themselves.
Cigar in mouth an’ a Bilk ping hat
don't alters make th’ genti’men ;
skunks has fiue fur.
Teachin’ that there’s a way t’ ’scape
th’ consequences o’ sin is jest as bad
as givin’ free incense t’ do evil.
Canady thistle lores th’ lazy farm
or.
Some women’s fond o’ publishin’
their husband’s faults, forgattiu’ that
they’re a-tellin’ their own at tho same
time.
It’s as seldom ye sse editors bred
t’ th’ bizness as ye find th’ bizness
as ye find th’ bizness bread t’ th’
editors.
In marryin’ allers choose a small
woman in preference to a big one,
’cause of two evils you’re sure to g 5 t
th’ least.
Wit bought is a heap better than
wit taught.
The only thing that holds a pretty
girl’s hand 'thout equeeziu’ it is a
muff.
Tailors an’ undertakers is like
woodcock—they iivo by their long
bills.’
A coquette is a woman ‘thout any
heart that makes a fool ef a man that
ain't got any bend.—77ie Continent.
The Arabs hare a s'.ory of a man
who desired to test which of his three
sons , loved him most. He _ sent , them ,
out , to , see which ol the three would ,,
bring him the most , valuable , ,, present. .
The three met . distant ... ... city
sons m a
-
and , compared , the ,, gifts they had
°” U * ” a a car
which he could transport himself
withersoever be would. Tbe
, had , a medicine ... which would ,, cure
any disease. ,. The third ... , had , . a gins- ,
“
. which , . , , to what , , .
ia see was gemg on
at , , home ; , be saw his father ill bed.
’ in
T1 e first , transported . , all „ „ three to .
their home on his carpet. The sec
>nd , administered , . . . tbe medicine and ,
saved bis father’s life. The perplexi¬
ty ef the father when he had to de¬
cide which son’s gift bad been of the
most value to bim illustrates very
fairly tbe difficulty of saying whether
land, labor or capital is most essen¬
tial to production. No production is
possible without the co-operation of
all three.
An Instant Remedy for
If a person swallows any poison
whatever, or has fallen into convul¬
sions from having overloaded tbe
stomach, an instantaneous remedy is
a heaping tea spoonful of common
salt as much ground inusterd stirred
rapidly in a teacup of water. It is
scarcely down before it begins to
come up, bringing with it the re¬
maining contents of the stomoch; and
lest there be any remnant of poiso-j
however let the white of an egg or a
cup of strong coffee be swallowed as
soon as the stomach is quiet; because
these very common article, nnlify a
numb er of viru l ent poisons. ^
To made excellent lamp wieds all
yon have to do is to tade one of the
men’s soft felt bats that is fit only to
bo baroed up, and utterly Useless
evec to a tramp, cutting them into
strips the width of your boughten
lamp wicks, and letting them soad in
vinegar for a couple of hours, then
drying them. You will find that this
pi#ce of economy will stop one of the
Sements Y0U1?
Troubled houaekeepers will be
pleased to hear tbat so simple a rem¬
edy aa tbe green peal of cucumbers
laid along the edge pf the floor where
they ed meet do congregate and
freshly for two or three nighte
diive every Cocdroach from
premises. This is an unfailing rem¬
edy hud tbe secret is in the fact
tbe juice of tbe peel is Clide
ible and poisonous to th# selfish vsr
min.
Terms $1.50 Ter Annum.
Enoch Arden’s True Story.
When Enoch Arden came home
after that memorable and disastrous
voyage which shipwrecked him and
his hopes he crept up the street to
his old home* as Tennyson informs
us, and looked in the window. There
he saw Phillip Raj and Annie, his
wife, and theif child, all seated
si'ound the hearth cracking walnuts.
The whole bitter truth came upon
him with terrible* force. Annie, sup¬
posing Enoch to be dead, had mar¬
ried Phillip so as to have a home for
herself and child and a mau about
the house in cise of tramps. It was
a sad coming back for Enoch, nud be
wad about it. Not so much because
Phillip had married his wife, for
(hero were pleuty more wives to be
had ; not because his child had
learned to cail anothei man ‘pa,’
though that was A bitter pill; inas¬
much as the child looked a little like
Phillip anytiow.
Neither of these things worried
him half so much ao to note that
Phillip was wearing his (Enoch's)
clothes. With a menacing gesture
he was just about to dash into the
house and annihilate them, when
suddenly the anger of his cov.nte
nance was supplanted by a look of
terror, and he slunk away as silently
as he had come. Ho had caught
sight of Annie's mother, who, during
Enoch’s absence, had biokou up
housekeeping and come over to live
with her daughter, and had become
a fixture there.
Enoch told some of the boys after¬
ward that it was the narrowest es¬
cape of his life, and that he would
rather be shipwrecked every five
minutes thon to encounter his moth¬
er-in-law.— Cincinnati Saturday Night
Selecting Seed Corn.
Thetime .. and , of , selecting ,
manner
seed , corn is . doubtless . , ,, well ,, known , to .
most . farmers, , it should , ... be, , but , it.
as
. not , practiced to the extent that the
is
importance . . , of , good , seed , demands, , ,
Tbe see(J which tQ produca the fu .
1 . e cro p should be of the very best
r# lvoid tl . ouble> ‘expense
^■Rsk, observe , the following rules .
forselestmg , .. seed . corn. Tx If . farmers ,
will tollow this yearly thier .
course
crops will gradually increase, -
, 1. Pick . ,i tbe ears that ., . set . nearest . t .
>
.
1 ° r ,° Un ’
2. m Those ears . havisg - a short . , foot , ,
stalk. . „
3. Frjm stalks having tho most
ears. Generally but one ear on a
■talk is proper for seed, athat usuallj
the seiond ear.
4. Never take from a stalk having
but one ear, if stalks can be found
having two or move ears.
. S. Always take ears that are filled
full to the end* and that ruu be
on ,i the huak, if such cau be had.
6. Lay up four or five time as
much as yon will need.
7. When you come to plant, before
shelling, break every ear and see if
the pith of the cob is dried np and
hollow, for if it is not, the corn is not
fully ripe: Then shell off the butt
and tip till you come to the long
grains.
gome icteresti 8tatisll08 bavo
been bUihed regar din« the wounds
infUcted men in battle , from
^ it thafc during the
0rimeaa on( of a tota , of 7>660
wounded( 2 396> or 3jL2 per
cent, received their wunnds in the
low* er extremities. Among the French
troops the ratio was a little higher:
The par cent age in tbe Franco-Ger
oo»n war was 30.5, or 7,360 wounds
of tbe lower extremeties out of a to
tal of 24,788 wound. Tbe following
record of wounds reoeived in foreign
battles is given : Crimean war-34,-
306 wounded, 11,873 wounds lower
.xtremities;ratio34 6. Italian war of
1859—19,672 wounded, 7,704 wounds
in lower extremities; ratio 39.1. Dan¬
ish War of 1864—1,907 wohnded,
553 wounds lower extremities ; ratio
28.9. Franco German war—24,738
Wounded, 7,500 wounds lower extrem
ities ; ratio 90.3. This shows a ratio
Of 33.4, or 35,519 Wounds of the low¬
er ek'femities in a total of 106,202
wounded: The conclusion is that tbe
- relative frequency of shot wounds ef
NO. 33.
ills lower extreL-eties does not exceed
that of wounds of the upper limbB to
the extent that, might be anticipated
from the greater s>ze of the lower
limbs- This is doubtless due to the
fact that, ih fighting in intrenched
positions, the lower part of the person
is partially screened from injury.
AUCTION SALE!
ON
WEDNESDAYS
ANP
SATURDAYS
AT
A. T. FORT'S OLD STAND*
—BY—
W. H. WILLIAMS,
Assignee of
A. T. FORT,
To-day we will begirt
at 11 o’clock, and sell
Dry Goods, Notions*
Clothing, Hats, Boots,
Shoes, Etc*
NEXT WEDNESAY;
DRESSGOODG!
Hosiery, Notions,
CLOTHING.
BOOTS and WltoES
HARDWARE.
TABLE LINEN, TOWELS. ETC.
W. H. WILLIAMS,
Assignee of
A. T. Fort.
Sept 29, 1883.
W.S. GILLIS,
DEALER IS
FAMILY GROCERIES,
Plantation /Supplies*
Country Produce Ptc*
Sotilti Side Public Square.
Lumpkin, Ga. Jan. 1,1883.
$100 DOLLARS A WEEK!
We can guarantee the above amount to
good, active, energetic
AGENTS!
Ladies as well as gentlemen, make a success
in the business. Very little capital required.
We have u household article as salable as
flour.
It Sells Itself.
It is lised every day in the family. You do
net need to explain its ■netita. There is a
rich harvest for all who embrace this golden
opportunity. It casts you only one cent to
learn what our business is. Buy a postal
card and write to us aild we will send you
our prospectus ar d full particulars
FREE!
And we know you will derive more good
than you have any idea of. Our reputation
as a manufacturing company is such that
we can u«t afford to deetiice. Write to us on
a receive postal and give your address plainly and
full particulars.
BUCKEYEM’F’G CO.,
Mabiou, Ohio
GIN AEGNCY!
Tbe nfcdertignfld is Agent for thd
Celebrated CENTENNIAL GIN and
the DANIEL PRATT GIN.
Parties wishing to buy a Gin will
find it their interest to call upon ma
al Lumpkin before going elsewhere;
For terms or any information apply
to S. S. EVERETT Agent.
Lmnrkin, Ga., June 9,1888.
T> X\j_LL) XTCinP 0 JL and not, life dare is sweeping before by, did gd
you
something mighty and $00 sublime week leave in be¬
hind to conqtier time. a your
own town. $5 outfit free. No risk; Every*
thing new. everything. Capital not required. We making will
ifiruisb you Ladies make Many are
fortunes. its much as men)
and boys and girls make grear pay. Bead-'
er, if you w nt business at which you cad
mat e great pay all the titn«, write for par*
tieulars to H. Halleit A Co., Portland
Maine.
Mar. 2Uh-1883-tf.