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THE TELEGRAPH AND MESSENGER, FRIDAY. DECEMBER 12,1884.
THU D£i*OCR*TIC COMMITTEE.
A Primary for Nominating County OfTI-
o«r>. to bn Held.
At a meeting of the Democratic Executive
Com ml* tee of Mibb county, held yesterday, the
chairman, Robert A. Khbct, called tbo
committee to order and ttntcd the object ol
the meeting to be that of consultation, wheth-
eror not the committee should nrd'r a pri
mary* election for Democratic nominees for
county officers. After discussion, It was de-
cl Jed and so ordered that a primary election
bo bold for tho various county officers on Sat
urday, Deoember^Oth, to bo conducUd after
tho nfual manner.
Thu following maniam wur» »i.polnt«d!
Court Houjii-A. I*. Colllui, W. A. Poe, C.E.
H WuT Engine IIou«e-A MOth.*., John
8 Ean'&Mn Ja jLBuim*. L. J. Bedding, D.
"aodfrey^-W. A. Jenklm, C. H. John,on, Mor-
*'hu C uIu<1-A. Moffett, J. J. Tinlejr, WlUi.m
II iv«rrlbr-g^ulre Parker, Prenlc Parker, W.
Hazard-Bun ch.mbllii, A. J. Blohudwn,
W. L. Hughe.
Hr. Niatiut then offered tho following re«o-
lotion. whluh were adopted t,v the committee
gud ordered publUhcd, with the proceeding.
■ of the committee:
"Tothe Democrats or Bibb courty: The
Democratic party of the United States, through
Ita deh gates, met in convention at Chicago in
July last aud nominated Its candidate* for
the offices of President and vlpe-PresIdent of
the United 8tates. At the election iu Novem
ber these candidates were triumphantly elect-
be wlsuly/nonestly and economically admin-
**^he*Democratlc party of the Btate of Geor
gia met In convention aud named ita candi
dates for Governor and State House officers,
and these Candidates have been elected by
overwhelming majorities and are already con
ducting the affairs of the 8tate In
the Interests and for the good of all the people
of the 8tate
"The election to dll the various county offices
takes place In January, and every clttii n of
the county is interested In havimetheso offlees
filled by .competent, honest, true m*n. .uch
men can only be found in the democratic
party, and m the Democratic cou ty of Bibb
• «... nmmn thp
nS&A&JoMuSmw dut^to‘too the stauM thafon'December30. 1870. after
csndl^ft** whoshiSrbeelectell to these varl- Tneodore Tilton had visited him and made
"Youre^cudve committee has decided to
order a primary electio n, to be held on 8atur-
dip, theJJih of December, lor the purpMeol
selecting Democratic candidates lo be voted
for at the election in January, and every Dem
ocrat in the county is urged to go to the polls
on that day and assist lu the selection o $ood
The
to major the various county offlees.
e meeting then adjourned.
THREE LITTLE TRAMPS.
Some Llttlo Olrls Attempt a Long Jour
ney on Foot.
When the children at the Appleton Church
Home were summoned to prayers at 0 o’clock
yesterday morning, it was found that three
little girls were misting. The premises were
searched but they could not he found high
nor low. Sister Margaret, who has charge of
the institution was (nfcreat distress and sent
to the barracks at once for officers to look for
the waifs. Every search was made bat proved
fruitless #
About half past 8 o’clock Mr. John Skin
ner, llvlug about three miles from
the city on the Atlanta road
and whose wife *As formerly au inmate of the
Home, came in and reported that early iu the
morning three little gtrla stopped at his house
to warm. They were bareheaded and very
cold. He thought they were from the Bibb
County Orphan Home, and went there to re
port the fact, which caused his delay in going
to the Appleton Home.
. On receiving this information. Sister Marxa-
/ Yet secured a hack and went after the chil-
' dren. 8he heard from them along the way,
and when she reaohed Summerflcld she
told the. conductor of a freight
train that was on Us way
north to have the children stopped if he
saw anythin/ of them. 8he then proceeded
on her way, and when Bollngbroke, eighteen
. miles from Macon, was reached, there she
I * found the children crying and sorry they had
l attempted the journey. The conductor had
left word at Bollngbroke. and when they
reached there tuey were detained. They had
tramped through the red mud All the way.
Sister Margaret aoon placed them in tha hack
and brought them back, reaching Macon at 8
o’clock.
t It seems that little Emma Reynolds, aged
ten years, who hu been in tho Home a long
time, recently paid a visit to her mother, who
live* In Atlani a. She came hack last Wednes
day, and cried ever since to go back home,
and Sister Margaret would have returned her
Death Of the “Mutual Friend."
N. Y.Snn.
Mr. Francfe D. Moulton died at hit resi
dence, 680 Lexington Avenue, at 6 o'olock
yesterday afternoon of paralysis of the
heart, aged 49 year* and 6 months. There
werepreaeutathls death his wife.Fraok-
liu w. Moulton, hie eon, W. A. Hazard,
his partner, and Dr. F. A. Thomas. Six
weeks ago Mr. Moulton was taken sick
with Inflammation of the stomach. At
first he did not suffer much inoonvenlence
and was able to leave the house occasion
ally and to ri ?• out. But three weeks ago
he grew rapidly worse end steadily weak
ened until yesterday morning, when the
attack of paralysis of the heart ended his
Bufferings. Daring the day his physician
gave uu all hope.
Mr. Moulton leaves a widow and jone
son, Franklin W., a student in Columbia
Law School and a graduate of Harvard
College. His only other child, 8evern D.
Moulton, died in infancy.
Francis 1). Moulton was born in this city
iu 1836, aud was the second son of 8evern
D. Moulton, formerly a New York mer
chant, who died several years sgo when
nearly 80 years old. Mr. Moulton came of
a hardy race of men, of English and New
England descent One of nis ancestors
rai-ed a regiment and fought with honor
at Bunker Hill. He lived to pass
his ninety-fifth birthday, and then walked
two miles to dine with a son. He died af
ter eating a good dinner. Hie son lived to
be 104 years old, and his son died at the
age of 95. Francis Moulton received his
early instruction from his mother. In 1849
he entered the college now known os the
College of the City of New York, where he
graduated in 1854. A medal for Latin and
oue for mathe uatica were awarded to him,
but he insisted that he was not entitled to
either of them. H* said that Edward Bel-
four, now a Lutheran clergyman, was en
titled to the flr»t, and that Prof. Rodney
Kimball, of the Brooklyn Polytechnic In
stitute, was entitled to the other.
Mr. Moulton's connection with the
Brecher-TIlton scandal began on Decern-
ber 30, 1870, when Tilton confided his
trouble to him and sought bis friendly
aid. In his testimony belore the jury in
the suit for 3100,000 damages for crim.con,
instituted by Theodore Tilton against
Henry Warn Beecher, he testified in sub-
the revelations, afterward made in public,
he called on Henry Ward Beecher aud
brought him and Tilton together, promis
ing to act between hem as a mutual friend,
and henceforth became the repository of
secrets and documents. The letters that
accumulated in Mr. Moulton’s hands from
Beecher were full of extravagant praises of
bitt efforts to “tie up the storm.”
He was called "priest in the. sanctuary.'
He was told that his kindness could never
be repaid even by love, which I (Beecher)
give to you freely.” Again he wrote to
Moulton: "I should have fallen by the way
but for the courage which you inspired
and the hope which you breathed.”
Mr, Mouiton managed this social com-
6 1 ication with such skill that the scandal
»its entirety was repressed for more than
four years. When it broke forth through
Theodore Tilton, Mr. Moulton endeavored
to maintain neutrality, and as he refused
to return to Mr Beecher the letters hs held
us a mutual friend, he was put upon the
defensive by aspersions upon his mo
tives, and when at length he broke
the silence his utterances were in
corroboration of TUton’a serious charges.
In one of his statements prepared by Gen.
B F. Butler, Mr. Moulton related a sepa
rate confession by Beecher, leaving blank
th« plaoe for the woman’s name. This re
sulted in a salt for libel by Miss Edna
Dean Proctor, the settlement of which
cost Mrs. Moulton about $9 000. He was
the chief witness against Henry Ward
Beecher in Theodore Tilton’s suit, his tes
timony covering 485 pages of the official
report oi the trial. He was indicted at
the instance of Beecher, but a nolle was
entered to tne indictment. Mr. Moulton,
after the scandal died out, actively resum
ed business for nimaelf with, great finan
cial success, and in connection with the
importation of salt, became active in the
promotion of dairy farming.
LEGAL NEWS AND NOTES.
Prepared lor the Telegraph and Messen
ger by w. B. Hill, of the Macon Bai
BUSINESS LAW.
Under this heeding, the lew of proposal
and acceptance has been stated. Where
contraeta are made by letter or telegram,
•pedal rales apply. If an offer la made by
letter, the acceptance dates from the mail-
log of tho reply, not from ita reception. So
II • proposal la wired, the acceptance dates
from the moment of sending the reply.
The propoaer 1, bound from time of accep
tance and cannot oanoel It by a letter or
telegram crossing the reply In the' post or
on the wire. Bat in order to g'et the ben-
eflt of binding a proposition, tho receiv- 1
erollt mast reply by return mail. If he
delays and the other sarty retracts and
communicates the retraction before the re
ply la mailed, the retraction la good. The
rule a< to replying by return mall applies
a'so where the proposer by negligence mis
directs the letter. Llndsell offered Adams
wool at a certain deuce, requiring reply by
return post, bat directed it to the wrong
county, although to the right town.
The letter arrlred four days
late, and LtndseU supposing
Adam, didn't want the wool, sold it. But
Adam, wrote the same day he got the let
ter accepting the offer, and on LindseU'a
refusal, he taught Mr. Llndsell the im
portance of directing tetters properly; he
got tbe value of tho wool. A reply to an
offer ol Insurance, although the offer was
delayed twenty days In the mail,, by the
sender', fault, bind, the bargain and se
cures tbe lniurance, although the house
was burned the night after mailing the re
ply. aud the reply itself did not reach the
— pany until ten days after the fire. (9
card 390.) A party who wrote for
share, of stoclc and to whom the oompany
replied agreeing to give them I, bound
although the reply miscarried and he
didn't dad out la three yeare that the
company accepted his offer. He author-
Ired the company to reply by mall, and
thus made the pm*-offlee hla agent. It
was therefore more hla business than that
of tbe company to Hod out what became
of the reply.
me arracr or guenon ysaxs.
On this subject, the Albany Law Jour
nal thus discourses: “Tnere is oomparai
lively little law bulnen in the year of tt<*
presidential election, aud tho lawyer* are
running after office for themselves, or
others, or both. These election, come too
frequently for the good of the country.
Either In county. State or Federal politics
there la some political turmoil nearly all
the time. . It would be much better, it
seems to us, 11 the presidential term were
•lz years instead of four, and if the gu
bernatorial term were twice ns long, or
half as long again as it la. Onr canvasses
are constantly becoming more corrupt,
more virulent, more tainted by betting,
more unscrupulous in every way. As the
legal profession are notoriously addicted
to politics It must follow that they are pe-
c dlarly subject to all these unhappy In-
fluencet, and prone to all these uudesira-
ble practices. It Is psrbsps titling that
tho lawyer should be frequently represented
in politics, although we feel bound to say
that he is not always well represented, but
there is a craze among lawyers for politi-
cal campaigning that unfits them for their
business, and takes their business away
from them. It is to be feared that much
of the vituperation and Blander of the
campaigns is attributable to the license of
the bar, which is regarded by those who
are gnilty of it in a merely Pickwickian
sense, but which degrades tnCrji more than
it hurts its object.
PRACTICAL commekckmkkt address
is that delivered by I. E. 8humate, of Dal
ton, a leading lawyer of North Georgia, at
Emory and Henry College and now pub
lished. Its sound senseis indicited by a
brief extract: “Year after year have suc
cessive generation! of college boys beei
addressed as though they were all Burkes
and Websters. Whltefields and Edwardses,
in their possibilities; whereas the oentu-
; induced two little
phan sisters, Nellie. aged nine, and Flora,
axed eleven, to go with her. A bout 5 :30 o clock
yesterday morning the children slipped out
through »he side gate and took the railroad.
They are now safe at the Home, truly peni
tent and were glad enough to get back.
THE. EX-CHIEF OF THE N*CMJBBA8.
Some Interesting Visitors from tho
Desert of KulahL
N. Y. Sun.
One of the strangest groups of human be :
m togs that has ever reached these shores
&S concluded*to ‘SM SnTSS J*"** «!t«moon on the floor In tho
• — — Castle Garden office. These people were
reprerontative, ol.the N'Chubba tribe,
which reside In tbe Kulahl Desert, in the
interior ot Africa, at about latitude 18 de
grees and longitude 20 degree,. The Af
rican, wore barely anything except
blankets of great warmth and remarkable
gaudlnesa. Tbe leader of the party, which
mastered six strong, is Conqut. Ho was
the chief of the N’Chnbba tribe before be
abandoned that constituency fer the show
business. He is 35 years of age and has a
light mustache and imperial. Hi, hr.ir,
like that of the others, grows in bnnehes
more than a quarter ol an inch in length
and suggests small, shrubbery which
spring, np unevenly on poor land. Con-
rial is only 4 feet flinches in height, bathe
was the tallest man in hla tribe. On each
side of his brow a small sea shell la fas
tened to tho hair by, way of ornament
The ex-obiet carries a long bow, bat lest
be should do some harm with this, the
string has been taken away from him.
He use. the bow stick as a staff and also
as a corrector lor the young of his party.
The N'Chuboas are not nearly aa dark
as ordinary Africans. Their color, in
(act, is almost as light aa that of the In
dian. They have flat, small features, with
high check bones and little dark eyes.
Mrs- Conqul, nee Arbecv, is 42 yearsi of
age and has an ugly, wrinkled face. Un
der her gaudy blanket, however, the wear*
more clothing than do tbe other visitors
from the Desert of Kulahl. Her arms
are bare, and arc quite shapely. The
pair have a bright lookmr immature l»y,
named Arby. This Interesting child, like
the restol bis tribe, baa a strong passion
for tobscco. He will, when nursing aban
don hi, mother for a pipe or a cigar. But,
although the N'Chubba, are all smokers,
they are strict teoto talers. Nothing
stronger than coffee ever passes their lips.
In addition to bis own child, Conntu has
three young people whom he probably i»r-
rowedfrom former neighbors with the
privilege of not returning. These are
Min Icy, an interesting maiden o( 12
Co. a stripling ol 19. and Fimuon, the
dude of his tribe. Finmon, altbough 21
years old, does not appear to.bomore than
Compllmontlnac a Macon Fireman.
( During his recent trip North, Mr. James H.
Campbell took a run over from New York to
Morristown, where he has somo relatives.
Some of the members of the Independent Hose
Company, who visited Mscon last April and
who were the guests of Protection No. 1 of M*
oon, heard of Mr. Campbell’s presence In the
city, and he was at once tafcen In charge.
About 9 o’clock the Independents, with Mr.
Campbell as their guest, sat down to a dinner
which lasted until 1 o'clock uext morning.
The time was spent In toasting, eattug, inter
change of anecdote aud flremnnlc experiences
and must have been an enjoyable affair
throughout While Mr. Campbell was tho rep
resentative of Macon, the occasion was one In
compliment to the Macon fire department.
Macon appreciates the kind treatment of her
—m -*»*— •»- v -” —* **'*rh favor
1 by the
which her Ore department is
Independents.
The following bill of fare was printed on
gilt-edge cards with a pheasant in natural
colors embossed thereon:
Complimentary dinner to Mr. James H.
Campbell, of the Macon, Ga., fire department;
given by Independent Hobo Company No 1,
of Morristown, N. J., Friday oveuing, Novem
ber 28,1884.
Menu-Blue points, on shell, mock turtle,
julienne, boiled salmon, egg sauce, potato cro
quettes, roast Umb, mint sauce, French peas,
roast saddle venison, currant jelly, fried sweet
potatoes, mallard duck, cranberry sauce,
mashed potatoes, quail on toast, Ssratoga po
tatoes. deviled crabs, dressed celery, lobster
croquettes, chicken salad, plum pudding,
brandy sauce, wine jelly, Charlotte de Russe,
Bisque Glace, fancy mixed cake, grapes, or-
, anges, bananas, paper shell almonds, pecan
nuts, English walnuts, retains, tea, coffee,
Chocolate, cigars.
the bodies - - - -.—
things, hold fast that which Is good’’ has
as much to do with th* practical aide of
life as it has with the moral side. Our
readers will be»r testimony that In all
questions discussed in the Index, tho prac
tical has been duly set forth. In this para
graph. therefore, we only seek to present an
article worthy of commendation. After sub-
jeering it to the above test, webavetried
Swift's Specific, and round It good-good as a
blood purifier, good aa a health tonic. Iu this
opinion we arc sustained by some of the best
men in the church. Rev. Jesse H. Campbell,
Nestor of the Baptlsi denomination In
"It is my delioerate
‘ “ fle is the grandest
rered. Its effects
»mp treble to it.” Dr. H. C. I
the nest known ministers In our c
says: "Swift’s Specific 1* one of lb
blood purifiers lncxlstenCe.” These .
ren speak advisedly. Few preparations how
before the public can bring forward such
indorsements. The Index desires only to 1
indorse these statements. We have witnessed
tho beneficial effects of this medicine, not
only in our own households, but in* eev-‘
era! other cates, where, seemingly, all other*
remedies ha-l foiled, it is purely a vcgetabll
compound, scientifically prepared, and per
fectly harmless in **• composition. It renews
the blood..and imllda up broksn-down systpms
—give*loneandvlgor to the constitution, as.
well as restores theo.oom of health to the suf
fering. Therefore, we do not deem it incon
sistent with the dignity of a religious Journal
to .••ay this much in Us behalf.
Corsets With Pockets to Carry Cash In .
i Season. ..
In a new traveling corset is a long flat
pocket arranged with ttfO divisions trfslde,
one for gold and bank notes, the other for
silver and small < ash, fastened at the low
er edge on one side.
Taking Care of the Lndy.
Tho following editorial is taken from the
Christaln Index, published at Atlanta, Ga.,
under tho date of December 1,1881: _____
"Too mauvpeoplo seem to think that a re
ligions neintoapershould oe confined to the —
discussion ol morel and religious lubjecu only f 2 His tastreare deckledlv a'ithcUo. On
swwsnsww ^Ijbratgaie'iir.Taa
brown string. Finmon shows other evi
dences oi giddiness. Instead ol tho con
ventional desert smile ot hi3 countrymen,
he circles and simpers aa if he were say
ing. "Go woy, yon saucy thing.”
The N'Chubhas, when at home, wander
about in families. Rock's and trees are
their only ohelter. They are not nt all
oarticular what they cat. Anvhing
handy will answer for dinner, no matter
whether Itis a quail, a snake, or a few
roots. They are not cannibals, and ap
parently have not energy enough to be
murderous. When invited by his mana
ger lo stand up, Conqai rises with evident
reluctance, and seems to protest humbly
hut earnestly against the unusual exer
tion, and as soon a3 possible resumes a
sitting posture. The VChubbas do not
talk like other Africans. Their language
seems to bo a scries ol chcks in the back
portion of their months. The words evi
dently have no formation. The people
hava only mastered two or three E
words. They were induced to leave
ca and taken to London, where
they were exhibited tor
months in the We t
Aquarium, where they were
upon by Oscar Wilde, Mrs. Langtry, an.
other celebrities. The party arrived on
the Guion steamship Wyoming. Before
they were allowed to land the commis
sioners of emigration obliged their agent
to give bonds that hia cariosities would
not become public charges.
Adelina Patti,
The great aongstress, eavs of Bolon Pal
mer's Perfumes, Toilet Soaps and other
Toilet articles: "I unhesitatingly pro
nounce them superior to any I
Principal depot, 374 and 370 J
New xork.
K ared in all the annals of the Churches
America.
Those who haye become merchants and
manufacturers and agriculturists, and en
gaged in other industries, have enjoyed
as great distinction and reap
ed far richer harvests of wealth
than those who have entered the
learned professions. But one man In a
million can, by accident, or by force of
circumstances concurring with the golden
opiiortunity, or by force of genius, attract
the favorable attention of the better in
formed of the fifty-five millions that peo
ple this land. But one in ten thousand
can attract the attention of a single mil
lion. How often have we heard eagle ora
tors upon commencement occasions point
young gentlemen to the eagle soaring
above the storm, gating with steady eye
upon the sun, fixing its eyrie and utter
ing its scream ainia the beetling crags of
the mountain! Imaginary bird with imag
inary qualitea!
MISCELLANY.
In the absence otjproof of negligence, a
sleeping-car company is not liable for a
diamond pin stolen from the berth of a
passenger. A hotel keeper would be, If
stolen from a guest; bat the Supreme
Court of Kentucky declined to decide that
a sleeping-car was an "inn on wheels.” 6
Ky. L. R 279.
An inn-keeper’s liability for a guest s
baggage is not diminished, bnt rather in
creased by the fact that the gneat has got
too drunk at his bar to take care of it him
self. 21 Eng Rep. 561.
A Presbyterian church member who
was turned out for false statements
made by him against the pastor was tried
in hts absence and without notice and
turned out. He sued the pastor who read
the resolution and the olerk who passed it
to the members of the session for their sig
nature for libel. The action was defeated.
In matters ecclesiastical not affecting
property or rights, the decisions of the
proper church judicatories made in
good faith are conclusive on civil
tribunals. The defendants in Jhe case
were not liable, unless their conduct was
maliciously and colorably made to cover
an intended scandal against the plaintiff.
30 Alb. L. J., 435. .
A discharged clerk who continued to re
ceive letters relating to his employer •
business, and who returned them to the
senders, who went among the employer s
I junction wills ''dishonorable'' in a itatntel
authorizing a SUM medical board to relu^
licenses relent-toconduct of tl o latter cha
geter and not merely to violations oltbe
e rcfcislonal etiquette against advertising.
■>. 714. I
THE ADAMS-CwLERIDOE CASE.
Points'c> the Letter Which Led to’thel
Scandal.
■ The following are extrac ts from the let
ter of Bernard Coleridge to hla alatarj
which was the canse of the recent Adams-
Coleridge trial |n London:
”11 Waataooaxi Btaaar, December U,l
1683.—My Dear Mildred: I write to you
not only as your brother, bnt chiefly as
my father’! son, because I feel It to be my
duty. I write in order that when misery end
unbappintss come upon yon—aa come
they Will-yon may not hare it to zay that
von were not folly warned, and that mat-
ten were concealed from yon. Are you
aware of the character oi tbe man to
whom yon are about to give younelf up?
HU family, one and all, will fiave nothin*
toaavtonim. Is this all without reason 1
Do you know be has failed thronahout hla
life ? Why Is this, for he la a man ot un
doubted ability 7 It la because of hla utter
want of character and principle Do you
know anythin:! of his past history? I>o
yon know of his behaviur oo his voyage to
I the cape? Dojouknowhe ran away with
a girl under age? I)o you know that so
i-trong was lha indignation at hla conduct
thai the bishop of Cape Town ordered his
clergy to refu.e to marry him, aud that
consequently he,with his high church pro-
teasions. was married by a Presbytarlaa ?
“Do you know that Mr. Adams bae a
Tiolent temper? Can yoadizguiae from
yourself in your vanity that it fa money
and position, not you, that ha la scheming
to obtain? Are von ignorantthathehaa
admitted that in his eyciyonara devoid
of personal attractions; that you would
notmakeatallagood wife,'and that yon
wonld bet white stephanl to him? What
would yon think In another case of a man
who, while never tired of proclaiming that
the lnatlnote of a gentleman were absolute,
makes UtaitU at horn, and aocapta hos
pitalities In a bouse In tbe absence of the
master, when he knows that tbe matter
refutes to meet him ? Yon declare to the
world that yon are lU-treated at home by
my father. Never was thereto glaring an
instance of thedangerof allowing a per .on
to have no want, wish or whim nugrath
fled. Whatever may be my father’s fault*,
to you he bu been uniformly iudulgent
beyond anything I have ever seen in any
instance.”
Tbe atatementa In thte letter the plain
tiff denounced on the trial aa "unailtigated
and unqualified Ilea,” and dwelt seriatim
and at great length on all the allegations
In it concerning aim. Referring to the
charge ot accepttog hospitality In a
house In the absence of Its master, he
■aid it was a plain and unqnaliUed lie.
He never made himself at home In Lord
Coleridge's bouse In tbe absence of
Lord Coleridge, and hla lordablp never
refused to ,e* urn. He had lunched once
In Lord Oolridge'e bonze, bnt be believed
not at Lord Coleridge’s expense, as at that
time the houeehold waa on board wagez,
and Mist Coleridge was paying for herself
oat of her pocket-money. Tne sole ho.pl-
tallty to which he wae indebted to Lord
Coleridge waa a piece of bread and
butter which he ate one day
to keep Miss Coleridge in countenance
while taking her lunch. This, he said,
“consisted of fried sole, or what are call
ed 'slips'—and while ahe was partaking of
that aumptuoue repast, at ber earnest re
quest and to keep her In countenance, I
did take a piece of bread and ipread upon
it a piece of butter.. Thii is the sole hoXV
pitality that I have been Indebted to Lord
Coleridge from the firet moment of my ac
quaintance with him to tbe present mo
ment."
Told br the Engineer.
SL Paul Day.
Qadl bnt yon have a cold climate op
here! Why, down Booth on the Central
Pacific road it la as warm aa rout potatoes,
and then to come np here. Whewl It la
av good u ether for dental operations.”
The speaker wu Wall Smith, one of tbe
oldest engine: rs on the Cefltral Pactflc, and
noted u the champion prevaricator on a
bee line from BL Louie to Ban Francisco, a
sort of Mnlhattan on wheete, at the aame
time regarded u good an engineer u ever
throttled a locomotive.
“Come in and get warmed np.” said the
Dat reporter be bad accosted, and a tew
seconds later tbe ooxy surroundings ol the
Meichants'served for a background, as
he nfeModed.
arant to know about that accident
1 Well, I was then running on a
fastl«*s3 train between Salt Lake City
andVue coast About 12 o'clock one
mocSight night in autumn, just after
leaving Kelton, I noticed a white horse
running loose alongside my en
gine. My eyes became transfixed,
and no matter how I tried, I could not
take them off that horse. I put on more
steam sad went at a forty-mile rate, but
the horse went alongside at an easy gait
I shoved her up to fifty, and went flying
through Motieir, Terrace and Bovine, but
whitey held hia own. I yelled to the fire
man to shove in more coal, aud in five
minutes more we were running lixtv milts
an hour. Why, we appeared to fly over
the ground, but that horse kept alongside,
and I was so excited that I fell in a dead
feint in the bottom of the cab ]u«t aa we
were going into Moors. Our orders were
to run to Elko, but the fireman pulled up,
and the conductor came rushing to the
front with hts hair on end. I had recov
ered by this time, and was ready to an
swer all questions. I told the conductor
about the horse, but he wouldn’t have it.
"Before the train started again we found
oat what it was. I’m ashamed every time
I think of It. A passenger on the train
had the plQture of a horse on canvass be
side a window, and the light of a lamp be
hind it threw the shadow alongside the
engine.''
The Presidential Railway:
, Chicago Herald.
“What did I tell you last spring?” said
Passenger Agent Johnson of the Lake
8hore railroad. “Didn’t I tell you we had
the Presidential railway of America7
Well, we have, and we’re a going to keep
it so. You remember that I told you we
bad had two successive Presidents, Hayes
and Garfield, who lived at towns on our
road, and that we would have the next
one, too- Well, we’ve got him. I told you
who the man was, too, bnt you
didn’t believe me, did you! Uh,
you did 7 Well, you’re the only
one that did. Hayes, Garfield,
Cleveland, all Lake tihoro men. That
isn’t all. The Lake Shore is going to have
the next President, too. We're in tbe bus
iness to stay. Who is he? Shi Don’t
give it away. Romeiss is bis name. Bag
gage agent of ours down at Toledo. We
have just sent him to Congress in Frank
Hard’s place, and he is our candidate for
President. He’ll get there, too Who
ever heard of Romeiss before, you lay!
Well, whoever heard of Cleveland? That’s
the beanty of this Democratic country.
There’s a chance for all of us, especially
all Lake Shore men. You remember what
I say. If we can’t get Romeiss In, I’ll go
myself.” |
Rumored Frustration ot the Sate of tha
wacon and Brunswick Railroad.
Albany News.
A Brunswick special to tha Savannah
News says it is rumored in Brunswick that
the sslrt of the Brunswick and Western
railroad has been fruitrated, and that the
Frankfort committee, with certain parties
in Alban v and Brunswick, will take charge
of the road toon. It has been an open se
cret in railroad circles for some time past
that the attorneys of the Plant Investment
Company, soon after the latter bought the
road, discovered some objections to the
titles. The Bilixmans, from whom, or
through whom, the road was sold, were
then asked to guarantee the titles. They
refused to do this, but said they thought
they oould send an agent to Germany and
have the objections that had been found to
the titles removed. The rumored frustra
tion of tbe sale would, therefore, in view
of the faots stated above, indicate that the
tieligmans have failed in getting the objec
tions referred to removed.
In this connection another fact whicH is
not generally known may be stated, and
that is that the management of the road,
as organized under the alleged change of
ownership, has never taken charge ol the
road or assumed control of its operation.
Flshtlnft In Church.
Hoivsllsvillb. December 2.—Barney
Bell and Henry Wadsworth are members
of the Zion African Methodist Charoh in
Bath. They were rival candidates for the
position of leader of the choir. Wads
worth was successful. On Sunday even
ing he selected a hymn to ba sang which
did not salt Brother Bell. Words arose
between the two musicians, and Bell
knocked Wadsworth down. Wadsworth
drew a knife, and Bell took a heavy stick
of wood from the wood box.
Bell struck Wadsworth over the head
with the stiok of wood. Wadsworth stab
bed Bell in the breast, inflicting a wound
on inch deep and three inches long, near
thehearL The two men then aiuched
and fell together on the floor. Members
ol the congregation tried to separate them,
but did not succeed until both men were
eeriou.«ly injured. Bell’s wounds were at
first thought to be fatal Wadsworth was
arrested and held to await the result of
Bed's injuries.
Hmut is a good one from ihe.Toccoa
News: Ax was said of the old Adrian
Empire. “It was, bnt it Is not,” may now
be said of the Toccoa Reading Club. The
fact that the club had disbanded has not
become- generally known, especially to
some of the married ladies of the town.
A prominent citizen had l>een a
fnithtul member of the club and
only deserted the ahip when it Mink be
neath the wave*. Hia wife was in conver
sation wiih some ladies a few days ago
and one of them regretted the feet that
the club had disbanded. Said the good
lady iu surprise: “Jlas the club disband
ed?” ‘ Oh, yea, over a month ago.” 8aid
ahe: “I dever could hare told it by the
time my husband comes home at night.”
Murder will ouL *
THE LOST MEttSAQE.
down by the dark flowing river,
Mourn, dove, fori never ahall »ee—
Hand trembling and dear lipa a quiver,
Berne message my darling wrote me.
Grieve, loro, for death caught the token.
Weep, soul, for tbe sweet words unspoken,
Break, hea»t, for tbe message wae broken—
What did my darling write me?.
you slog ituptherel
What? What? So I wonder and ponder—
Wood robin, can you tell it me?
Down here will I know, or up vnnder?
_ How long must I wait ere ft he?
Brown bee. in the bioesomlng cl .ver,
Wild blrd.m tbe wood and a rover,
Whispering wind, as you roam the world over,
Bring her lost message to me.
—-[Robb J. Burdette.
BREVITIES.
One old maid.
And another o d maid,
And another old maidt -that's three—
And they were a gossh.ln.. t’m afraid,
As they sat sipping their tea.
In the usua' gosaf lug way.
Until every one was as black as your hat,
And the only white ones were they.
One old maid,
And auothcr old maid—
Aud now but one
Dame sat all alone,
For the others were both away.
"I ve never yet met,” she said with s
"Such scandalous talkers as they.”
tr wuu luiu aaya 10 our uui
Is sure to be gossip aud talk.”
The laundry bill of the Pullman Palace
Car Company amounts to 8120,000 a year.
A Frenchman wbo recently died directed
In hla will that the Mira of 88,000 should bo
given to tbe “wouudod In the uext war with
Germany.”
Tux Swiss government is taking active
steps to suppress tho Mormon missionaries In
all the cantons.
There are 10.000 teetotalers in .the rail
way service of Great Britain, and 13,000 among
the sailors in the naval service.
Stoke Park, with the churchyard im
mortalized by Gray’* elegy, could not find a
purebaaer the other day, and was bought in
„ men, who were
recently dropped from the navy before and
after the regular course at Anuanolls, arc try
ing to obtain positions In the Cnlnese navy.
A single redwood tree in Galifornia fur
nished all the timber for one of tho largest
churches in that State and 00,0 0 shingles be
sides.
Complaint is made in England of the
carelessuess of parents in sending children
to school lu infected clothes. Many cases of
diphtheria and scarlet L ver at Canterbury,
some fatal, have been tiaced to this.
an Arizona editor thus pave bis respects
to his neighbor: "The miserable scarecrow
who tries to edit our disesteemed contemporary
'-lying,as usual. Wodou't want ihepoi-t-offlce,
it we are In the hand* of our frleuds; and by
the Eternal they’ll see that we get it.”
An international exhibition devoted to
newspapers will be held at Nice, France, dur
ing the latter part of this mouth. The director
ot the exhibition has sent out a circular askiug
for copies of every journal, especially of every
dally paper published.
An invention that will be appreciated
by men who go home late and tired is the mag
netic keyhole. If tho key la placed within a
short distance of tho bole. It is gcutlv drawn
right iuto It, aud all the man has to do Is to
"Rcavensucarth,” or words to that effecL
A physician says that a baby must not
be allowed to sleep with Us mother. Mu* t not
be allowed t Did anybody ever know of a baby
that ever slept with its mother, or anybody
else? This physician ought to know that a
baby never goes to steep until It is tlmo tor
everybody else to get up.
Youno wire: “Why, Charley, what have
you gone and bought a dog for?’ r Young hus
band: "Ah—urn, my dear, you know wo can't
eat everything that comes on tho tablo—no
family can.” Young wife: ”Oh, Charley!
(crying) I knew you wouldn’t liko my cooking.
Oh, dear, dear!" Young husband: "There,
there! don’t cry; I’ll sell the dog.”
The knife of the guillotine
Marie Antoinette's head was cut l
Mme. Tusskud’s exhibition in London. It is
in the form of a collar, or circle of Iron, and
will weigh twenty-five pounds. The collar Is
cut horizontally, each half containing a knife
or blade. When used tho upper half waa al
lowed to fall between two upright standards,
striking tho neck which lay across the blade
of tho lowor half. In addition to that of the
unfortunate French Queen this guillotine has
severed the heads from tho bodies of
thousand persons.
The latest thing In clocks comes from
Russia It is a little timepiece about eight
inches high, on a baso five inches In diame
ter, and covered with a glass globe. All tho
works are plainly exposed. The pendulum Is
a solid brass wheel, supported at tho centre,
or hub, by a slendor wire. It docs not swing,
hut revolves from left to right and right to
loft. Being a 400-day clock, tho wlmtlng of It
is a small item. It will not vary flvo minutes
in running 400 days. No temperature affects
—Oarsman Clifford, who is to row Han-
lan in Australia, weighs 221 pounds, mainly
muscle.
—The pallium to be worn by Archbialiop
Ryan at his investiture lsexnocted from Romo
about the middle ot January.
—Superintendent MacAlistcr, of the
Philadelphia puhlio schools, declares heartily
in lavorof industrial education.
—It looks very much as though Judge
Advocate-Genersl 8walm would have to go.
Ilia difficulty seems to have been too muoh
poker for tho color of bis chips.
—Dr. John Buck,of Bsdminiter,England
administered bichloride of methylene as an
amcsthctlc to a patient and put him out ot pain
and out of exlsteuco in less than one second.
—Sensible Hpurgeon says hs finds only
Ten Commandments to keep, and not one of
’em agalnat>moklng, so he proposes to smoke
and let such of his parlshoners as please con
tinue to fume.
—Mme. Jenny Lind-Goldsmith Is more
than a mere honorary member of tho faculty
of the London Collcgo of Euslc. and goes every
day to Albert Hall to tea^h her cla», often
staying an hour or more longer than tho rules
require.
—Mies Gertrude McMsster, a daughter
of James A. McMaster, of New York, has be
come an Inmate of tho Carmelite Convent, in
Baltimore Her. sister, now known as Sister
Teresa, took the veil at tho same convent two
yeare ago.
—Nathaniel P. Banks, once Speaker of
the House at Washington and a favorite Presi
dential candidate with many Repnb leans in
the early history of the party, is now a candi
date for tho mayoralty ot tho town of Wal
tham, Mass.
—Representative William R. Morrison
with saturnln. solemnity, to an Interviewer:
"You can say that I don’t need to bavo my
name paraded in newspaper cabinet lists to
remind people that I am still in the Demo
cratic party.”
—A literary man asked a friend who was
I cannot say; but I know that If I had lived
only a week with her I should have done so.”
—The Attorney-General has appointed
lexander R. Boteler, of West Virginia, to be
upon btl new dull.I Immediately.
—Queen Victoria moumz the death of
lothet humble favorite. William Blair, who
fWStiLASWB
at tho advanced age of ninety yeare. lie had
dwelt on the royafettate daring the whole pe
riod ofits poMesrion byjtbe Qaeen, and was a
favorite with the late Prince Consort.
, congratulaUog* hini
thst he ought to know
.jmethlng about tbs difficulties of novel-
writing, as hs had himself been guilty of sov-
oral. Alexander, Jr., replied in tho same
Bplrlt, thanking Ills correspondent for his con-
graiu'atlons. of which he felt specially proud
aa oom'.ng from ono ot whom he had often
heard his lather speak in tho highest terma.
—The death of General England, After
ninety six years of life aud eighty year* of
military aervlce, leaves General Wnlchcoto
the note lurvlvlng Peninsular officer named
In tho HrltUh army llat. General Englaad
made all hla campaigns before lord Albermale
—now the only Waterloo officer In the army
Ibwecelredbl* first commission. The old-
e«t officer her of majesty’s European fore
Sir Abraham Clocte, wnohu been In tho
vice more than seventy years, but ths oldest
officer of the
— _iy is General
fir Arthur Wellesley, later Duke of Welling
ton, first went to Spain.
TWO UVES FOR A SMALL DEBT.
Dying at ths Bids of tha Man H« Rilled,
• Oueldst Begs Cod to Forgive Thom
Both,
Pales ring, Texas, Decs tuber 3.-Partic
ulars have biwn received of a double trag.
edy at NechesriUe, a thriving town twelve
mile* north of here, wherein two promi
nent residents, Dr. Cilhoau Lawrence and
Lucius V. Simpson were tbe victim*. Dr.
Lawrence, meeting Simpson in the even
ing on tbe street, asked nim if it was con
veuieut for him to pay eleven dollars due
on account, tiimpson declared he believed
he did uot owe the dootor anything. Hot
words eiihued and Lawrence called Simp,
son a coward, whereupon the latter drew
his revolver aud cai ed upon Ltwreuce to
in the breait. By this time a dozen or
more people bad gathered to witness the
fearful duel. B )th mortally wounded, tbe
two men stood within a few paces of one
another aud eup led the contents of their
revolvers iu o each other, every bullet
taking effect. When Simpson had emptied
his weapon, with blood streaming iron
five fearful wounds, be sprang at Law
rence and struck him a terrible blow on
the bead with the butt of his revolver.
This was 8itupsou’s dying effort, for in
stsntly he reeled, threw up his hands and
fell dead at the feet of his antagonist
Lawrence walked Into a neighbor’s store,
laid his pistol ou thecoauter and fell.
He was carried to his home, where he
■gged piteously thst 8impson's body
tgbt be brought in and laid beside him
bis was done, and for five hours the sur
viving man lay dying beside the corpsa of
his iate antagonist, all the time bemoan
ing his rash act and praying to God to for
give them both. He died toon afterward.
8o touching was this scene that it was
with tbe greatest effor' thst many friends
of both men could restrain their tsars.
The men were cousins by marriage, had
always lived ou most friendly terms until
this meeting, and both leave families.
George Coleman, a negro, living in Lin
coln county, purchased of Mr. Ben Cade a
tract of land, aud agreed to make paymeats
upon the same in the fall His crop was
short and he felled to meet the payments
os promised. He proceeded to repair the
situation, however, by stealing enough
cotton from his neighbors to cancel the
obligation. Three bales were stolen, but
not before the oflloers nabbed him,
and now George laag Ashes in the Lincoln-
ton jail. It is not always safe to do evil
tb&t good may come, especially when the
evil deed involves a display of total de
pravity.
Albai
watchman Brooks was crossiog the
vannah, Florida and Werieru railroad
bridge he saw a suspicious looking objec>
just peering above the top of the water,
it was against the piling of the bridge—
about ten feet from the bank. G:dng
down to investigate the material he found
it to be a sack of fresh pork, consisting of
four hams, thiee shoulders ana six feet—
about 125 pounds. The meat was proba
bly stolen night before last, and was hid
den rmt in anticipation of a search of the
thief s premises for it r
The euprema B .non.
A™****'September 23, Mi -Prom experi
ence, I thlak Bj 8.8. a very valuable remedy
lor cutaneous diseases, and it the tame Um«
~n Invigorating tonic.
JAMES Jackson, Chlsf Justice of Ga.
AN AQED BAPTIST MINISTER:
Two Mora Important Cases. »
Your agent bslua In Columbus, Gk., a ton
and meeting tbe venerable brother
J. H. Campbell, we asked him forthom*w«.
Uls reply was: «I hays two more important
cures effected br Swift’s Specific to report.”
The venerable man Is known far and wMo for
his unremitting labors of lor* In the b. i.n)' ,4
the poor of Columbus. It will be rem-
that tho Swift 8pcclhc Co. has donated quite
an amount of their famous medicine, to be
distributed by Mr. Campbell among the poor dl
tbe city, hence his remarks. He sold:
“I have just seen a lady who has been great
ly annoyed by a tetter In one of her hands, it
bad given her much trouble and pain. She
said she had been treated by several plnal-
clans during the past three or four years with
fife old remedies, but without giving any re-
.sef. I suggested Swift’s 8peelfie, and aha
took four bottles and Is now apparently per
fectly well.* Her hand Is smooth aud note
■Inwio sign of tho disease left. It is marvel
ous how this medicine renovates the system.”
••What about tho other case?”
"Well, that was a lady also. She had been
affected with the eczema for four yeare. n<-r
face, bands and arm*, os well as ber body,
was coveted over with sores -nd scabs, it
was one of tbe worst eases of this terrible dla-
ease that I have over seen. The suffering of
the poor creature was beyond expression. Hho
tried every remedy at command, Including
mercury aud Iodide of potash bat she only
grew worse. 8he wu In this condition when
I first uw the ease. I soon had her taking
Swift’s Specific, and she hu now taken only
two bottiex, but overy mark of the disease hu
almost entirely disappeared. Her strength
and general health have greatly Improved, it
is one of tbe most remarxabld cures that has
come under my observation.”
"Mr. Campbell, you have bad along and va
ried expor ouco in mingling with men. and
observing their afflictions and tbe re mod lea
used—what is your opinion u to the merits of
Swift’s 8pei!lflc?”
"In a ministry of sixty yeare I hare mingled
with every class of society, and havo observed
closely the variety of disease* which afflict hu
manity. Blood diseases are tbe moct numer
ous and the most difficult to remove. It is my
deliberate ludgmentthot Swift’s Speelfio Ih tho
grandest blooa purifier ever discovered. There
u nothing comparable to it. There is nothing
too good to say about Swift’s Specific.”
# Treatise on blood and skin diseases mailed.
The 8win Specific Co., Atlanta, Go.
A Card.
To all who are suffering from errors and
iudlscretions of youth, nervous weakness,
early decay, loss of manhood, etc., I will
send a recipe that will cure you, free of
charge. This great remedy was discov
ered by a mi-slonary in 8outh America.
8end self-addressed envelope to Rev. Jo
seph T. Inman Station D New York.*
THE GREAT SKIN CURE
moke Its sppearanoe on tbe Ungers
hands about tho firet of lut March. Suppoied
It wu ivy poison. Several saw it, some diag
nosing It as above, others pronouncing it salt
rheum. A great many domestic remedies
wore used, with no effect. The dlseue steadi
ly grew worse. The prescriptions of three or
four of our bezt physicians were tried, with
bat little bi tter results. The terrible Itching
wu so great u almost to deprive her of sleep.
After two months of this suffering she began
tho use of the Cutlcura Remedies. Whatwu
tbe result.? The first application of the Cuti-
cure allayed tbe itching, and now after four
months’dally use of them her hands aro
sound and well. I doubt not If they bad been
employed at first a cure would havo been ef
fected In a short time.
DR. W. II. HALL, Druggist.
Frsnkfort, Ky.
scaleThead.
T. J. Trucsdoll, druggist, Conneat, Ohio, re-
parts a case u follows: Tho patient’s head
wu almost a solid scab, and the dry scabs
constantly felling off hi* head, making his
ahouldors white In a few hours. He suffered
all tho tormoats imaginable with his head,
burning and Itching aud a terrible headache
all the time. Took threo bottles of Resolvent,
used two boxes of CuUcura^and somo Cutloura
Soap, and wu cured. Head Is as entirely
freo scabs u it wu the day he wu born No
more itching and burning, and no more head
ache. It seems almost Incredulous that any
thing could cuefixp bad a ease so quickly. Tho
gatienUays yoffffo not claim half enough '
^'""'“'DISFIGURING
Cutlcura Resolvi
cleanses IT
rittes and .
moves the cauio.
>rs. humiliating eruptions. Itching tor-
scrofula, salt rheum and Infantile hu-
cured by tho Cutlcura Remedies.
“rs Resolvent, the new blood purifier,
the blood and perspiration oflrapu-
1 poisonous elements, and thus re-
le cauio.
Cutlcura, th* great skin cure. Instantly al
lays Itching and^Inflammation, clears the skin
and scalp, hools ulcere and sore* and restores
the hair.
Cutlcura Soap, an exqaUlte skin beautlfler
and toilet requisite, prepared from Cutlcur*.
Is Indlsdenublo in treating skin diseases,
baby humors, skin blemishes, cbspi ed aud
oily skin.
Cutlcura Remedies are absolutely pure, and
the only infallible blood purifiers and skin
beau tillers.
Sold everywhere. Prtce-Catlcara, 80 cents;
Soap, 23 oenu; Resolvent, 81-00.] n
Pott*r Drug and Ohemloal Co.* Boston
BABY .kfohSate. 8 ""' “ "■ su “!"
AT THE FAIR
NICE CHEAP GOODS.
go and ••• B. F, Smith’s New Eton, Mol
wriyitreet, between Third and Fourth
ttreets, where can be had the?
Sites! Goods ia Haeoa fer the Money.
Dpu’t forget the place,
TjfgFAIR.
M0NEY__L0ANED
QN Improved Form* and City Property
For terms apply to
R. F. LAWTON,
HANMKR,
Second Street, I I I Macon, Ua.
**z*d*wir
wu* —ur-vmwg*
i^0l
Capital Prize, $150,000.
"We do hereby certify that we supervise tbe
arrangements of all tho Monthly rt ii<l Semi-
annual Drawings of the Louisiana State Lot-
In good faith toward all parties, and we aa-
thorixo the oompany to uu this certificate, with
fee similes of our signatures atiachod. In lt«
advertisements,”
ConunlsslonerEe
U nprecedented"attractions.
Over Half a Million Distributed.
Louisiana State Lottery Compuy.
Incorporated In 1868 Iot 25 yeare by the Leg
islature lor eduoational and Charitable pur-
poses—with a capital of |l,00Q.000-to which •
reserve fund of over 8865,000 hu slnoebee*
By an overwhelming popular vote Its fran
chise wu modo a part of the present State con
stitution adopted December 2d, A. D., 1879.
, It* Grand Blnalo Number Drnwlns* wlE
take place monthly. It never *oaVe* or pott-
pouei. Look at the following distribution;
178th Grand Monthly
and the
Extraordinary Semi-lnnoal Drawing
In the Academy of Music, New Orleans,
Tuesday, December 18,1884.
Under the personal Supervision and manage
ment of
Gen. G. T. BEAUREGARD, of Louis
iana,and Gen. JUBAL A. EARLY, of
Virginia.
Capital Prize, $150,000.
1 PRAND PRIZE OF
1 GRAND PRIZE OF 20 000....^ 20,000
^ 20,000
6,0<O 901008
1,000....MM* SW
to 600.mn
100 “ 890 30,000
200 " goo,.,...... Sot
«oo “ 00,00
1000 •• J0-..H** 60,008
. A7FBOXTVATION PRIZES.
100 Approximation prixoi of *200....... 820,00i
100 " •• 100 lo nna
2279 Prises, amounting to
AppUoatiOE for rates to club* should bo:
Feans* 0 *** °®°° °* ***• °° m P*ny In New Or*
For further Information write clearly, firing
fnll address. POSTAL NOTES. Kxpreu
Money Orders, or New York Kxchango In ordl*
nsry lotter. Currency by Bxpreas (qii earns ol
|6 and upwards at our expense), addressed
M. A. DAUPHIN,
.... New Orleans.Lz£
Or M. A DAUPHIN, ^
807 Seventh 8t.« Washington. D. C2
wMi “
NEW ORLEANS NATIONAL BANK, ^
New Orleans. Uu
WEAK. UNDEVELOPED PARIS
, nnvKLorsp,
consumption;
I have a poclttre rcaedv for Ute abort d Imam ; br lu
-MK SORE mU
40UTH WASH and DENTIFRICE
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WOWA. MAN