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J JOHN MTLUJ-ER, <te SON
I STAIK BUILDERS,
| INTERIOR FINISHERS and GENERAL CONTRACTORS.
| We make a aproialty of all kind* of HARD WOOD FINISH, » uc h m
I Book Cases, Counters, Church Furniture, Mantels, Etc.
I Bfirrieaee write for prices of Stairs, Newel i’oste, Rail Balusters, Etc.
' Best of References. All Work Guaranteed, 36 Decatur St
'■ . ..... _ _
Hunnicutt & Bellingrath,
36 & 38 Cor. Walton and Peachtree Sts., ATLANTA, GA.
We offer to the Trade the laroest and best selected stock of moves. lionizes. Furnace*Grate*
Slate and Iron Mantles, Wood Mantel*, Cherry, Muboiriiny ami Walnut of the im..,i mol ino*t
approved designs In the market. HA BY UAKKIAO EH, all style* and price*.
ICE CHESTS, REFRIGERATORS, BIRD CAGES,
Mathmsia.,*, Wanb Ik,*!,.a, Water Ctetot.
Plain and Stamped Tinware.
Contractor* for Plumbing, Gum Fitting. Mean, Hi-ntlng, OrnnmoiitaH Wvunlzcd Iron Work
Tin and Sheet Iron Rooting. HpcdfifiitlonM and <*l hunted fiirnhlwd for Ktoum I hot 11 ng.
Agents for Knowles’ Steam Pump and Hmyuiek’s Inspirator. Manufacturer* Conureto
OfJWOf i ip*.
HUNNICUTT & BELLINGRATH,
Mention this paper. ;w and UH Poiichtrec, Cor Walton Street, ATLANTA, GA
MILBURN WAGON CO,
39, 41 & 43 Decatur greet.. ATLANTA, GA.
• 1 k
I "I!!: ifeC
ti ii u till
Stop -x- i t nsw'-w^ - ' '
THE EAHUEftT MOCK OF
Carriages, Photons, Buggies, Farm and Spring Wagons
In the fit>uth will bo found at their wurcroom*. Cull nml m<*< them Indore laying. Th« befit goody
ire always the cheapest. It is not necemrr b> break into a penitentiary to get to work on our goods
II. L. ATWATER, Manager.
‘The Old Book Store/
38 MARIETTA STREET ATLANTA, GA.
Send or Call for our Mammoth Catalogue FREE!
Baseballs, Hammocks and School Books.
Bent Note Paper in the City, 24 aheets (1 quire) Seta.
Envelopes, (25) to match, scte.
The CHEAPEST BOOK & STATIONERY HOUSE in the World
OLD BOOKS BOUGHT AND SOLD.
Bo\ vthern Agency LO VELL’H LU IRARY.
ALL NUMBERS ALWAYS ON HAND.
S The o & House south of New York carrying a Full Line.
F’URNITUIU; FUBNITURE.
We adriae all thoM wanting Furnitore of any kind to go to
JOHN NEAL & CO.,
NOS. 7 AND 9 SOUTH BROAD STREET,
Al they keep a foil line, which they are m lll ng at lower pricaa than caa had elsewhere.
Bed rrx»m Htiif** from sl7 50 ap. eu? Do not forgH our a/Mna*
JOHN M. MILLER,
31 Marietta Street, Atlanta, (i eorgia,
General News and Stationery Dealer,
OFFICE SUPPLIES.
largest News Depot IN THE CITY
I JSu
this process of
BRIGGS fe CO'S! Stamping all kinds of Fabrics
LpR ART NEEDLE WORK
1 hf;PE,£/0K 70 A,J - O7HEKH.
Agents Wanted.
BRIGGS ;& CO.,
24 Peachtree it, Atlanta. Ga.
•"'* YORK
I MF* Bead atamp for Sample*. 4M
111 lIGET (IF FUN.
RftMOtlOl'M NKKTVHEN FtU»M
VI Hint s NOIIUIM,
What ttiwy Thought Votililn't Fool
Her-Homan.w of Chiin.lrr Item
t'how.lrr “My 1.0r.1, ihn
.lukc"— l.o»t Collar Hutton.
“Ha! ha! ha!" laughed a Detroiter aa
‘ hr met a lawyer at the postoffice yester
day; “hut a very funny thing occurred
In connection with my trip to Chicago
la<t week.”
“Yoa."
“Stopped r* one of the big hotels, you
know, and thb night I came away I for
got to pay my bill. Yea, air; walked
right off without Baying a word, and
never thought of the matter again until
half way home."
“I see.”
“Wonder what thay’ll think?”
“Why,” replied the lawyer, as he drew
a letter from his pocket, “they have al
ready forwarded me a requests to sue and
collect. The bill is $9.75, and rny fees are
|1.25. Please call at the office at once
and save expense!”- A'rw Preet.
Couldn't Fool Her.
As Mr. Krewskiu waa going home the
other day nt noon, he saw the wagon of
a traveling photographer.
“I will atop and have a few tintypes
taken, just for fun,” he mentally re
marked, entering the peripatetic estab
lishment.
“There,” said the photographer, show
ing him n proof, “I think that is a pretty
good likemr-w.”
Krewakin looked at it with a puzzled
expression, ami finally said: “l guess
it'll do.” When he got homo he showed
the tintype to his wife, and jokingly
told her it wns a picture of the “Wild
Man from Borneo,” down in the dime
museum.
‘•You can’t fool me," said his wife.
I examining the picture critically. “I've
seen the wild man from Borneo, and he
i ia not half so homely and frightful look
| ing as this,”
Hom n n< o of < 'll under Itn in Chowder.
t hunder Hum Chowder, the Reverend
i Marinalnde of Ddwwullagalhi, when a
young prince, was enamored ot a beauti
i ful girl, the daughter of a merchant.
1 lie | awned his dress suit, and for three
; days fed the object of his love with ice
; cream and cannpelu. At the end of this
j short siege, having persuaded her that
his facilities were uncqualed for continu
ing to supply her with unlimited qminti
I ties of caramels and leu eream for an in
definite period, she yielded and agreed
to depart with bin. to the wilderness.
That night, while the prince wns loiter-
I jug under her window with a bidder, her
father appeared and kicked him clear over
i the top of a grove of banyan trees, and
1 when he came down a bull dog as big as a
yearling calf, was waiting for him, and
sat down with him to a plain butaub
ntantiid luncheon, at which, however, the
prince ate nothing. The next morning,
on his way to the hospital, the beautiful
girl met him and said, reproachfully:
n “Last night you were to fly with me.”
” “Ah, yes,” replied Chtinder Ram
Chowder, “but last night your father
was too fly for me,”
He then entered the convent of the
ITwida Null Cluing, who took upon them
selves vows of celibacy and wore sheet
iron trousers; nor did he again see hia
charmer until five years afterward, when
he met her at the funeral of her third
husband, the other two having been di
vorced. —Burdette, in Brooklyn Kagle.
"My Lord, the Juke."
The late Charles Kean was once fulfill
ing an engagement at one of the smaller
country theatres, the “stock” of which
did not contain many future Henry
Irvings— in short, tire corps dramatique
was decidedly mediocre.
At the rehersal the eminent tragedian
was much shocked when one of the
actors, who had to assume a very minor
charaeb-r in the piece, announced to
him, *‘My lord, thedook!”
“My good man," said Mr. Kean, “for
heaven's sake be careful not to nay that at
night; the correct word is duke
duke,”
The humble Thespian announced that
It would be “all right" at night.
The scene WHS gone through again,
when the actor, who was not good at pro
nunciation, this time announced, “My
lord, the juke!”
This was too much for Kean’s irritable
temperament. There was a storm on that
i stage. The delinquent was banded over
to the care of a more intelligent member
of tlui <a»mpany, to be well drilled for
! the evening.
The night came, the luckless utility
man was in a state of excessive nervous
ness, ami had to bo almost pushed on the
utagii, When be got before the greet
man, the small modicum of self nosses
slon he had left entirely deserted him,
and he hastily blurted out, “My lord, the
dock duke—juke!" Tableau.
The Lost Mollar Hutton.
“My dear," raid Mr, Hpoopendyke,
feeling up the chimney, “have you seen
my gold collar button?’
“I saw It the day you bought it," an
' «were<i Mrs. Bpoopendyke, cheerily,
i “and I thought it very pretty. Why do
you ask?”
“ ’Cause I’ve lost the meanly thing,"
returned Mr. Hpoopendyke, running the
broom liandle up into the cornice, and
shaking it as if it were a carpet.
“You don’t suppose it is up there, do
you?’’ inquiiwl Mrs. Hpoopendyke,
I “Where did you leave it?”
“Left it in my shirt. Where do you
‘ suppose I'd Leave it—in the hash?” and
Mr. Hpoommdyke tossed over the things
in hi. wife’s writing desk, and Iwkcd
out of the window after it,
“Where did you leave your uhirt?”
; asked Mrs. Hpoopendyke.
“Where did I leave rny shirt? Where
ido you suppose I left it? Where does a
iM/i generally leave hia shirt, Mrs. Hpoop
endyke? Think I left it in the ferry-boat?
Got an idea that I left it at prayer meet
‘ ing, haven’t you? Well, I didn’t. I left
I it off, Mr». Hpoopendyke; that’s where I
left it. I left it off I Hear me!” and Mr.
Sprxpendyke pulled the clothes out of the
winr chest that hadn’t been unlocked
I fora month.
“Where is the shirt now?” persisted
I Mrs. Hpoopendyke.
“Where do you suppose it is? Where
I du yen imagine H M I'll tert yen a here
It U, Mrs Hpoopendyke, fts gone V
: Bridgeport, an a wltnes* in a Isnd swM
Idsa’ Ask a man where hi* shirt is? Yon
know I hnven’t I'ocn out of this bwm
' *ince I cams home last night, snd took it
i off," and Mrs Hpoopendyke sailed down
vtairt, and raked the fire out of the
kitchen range, hut didn’t find the button
“Maybvyou lost It on the way home,”
suggested Sirs. Hpoopendyke, saherhua
band came un, hot and angry, snd began
to pnll a stuffeu canarv to puces, tn toe
if the button had got Inside.
“Oh, you; very likely. I stood up
against a tree, and lost it. Then I hid
behind u fence to I wouldn’t see it.
That’s the way it was. If I only had
your head, Mrs. Hpoopendyke, I’d turn
loose ns a razor shop. I don’t know any
thing sharper than you are!” mid Mr.
Hpoopendyke clutched a handful of dust
ou the top of the wardrobe.
“It must have fallen out,” mused Mrs.
Hpoopendyke.
“Oh, it must, ch! It must have fallen
out. Well, I declare, I never thought of
that. My impression was that it took n
buggy and drove out, or a balloou and
hoisted out.” And Mr. Hpoopendyke
crawled behind the bureau aud com
menced tearing up the carpet.
“And if it fell out, it must b? some
where near where he left hit shirt. Now,
he always throws his shirt on the lounge,
and the button must be under that."
A moment's search soon established
the infallibility of Mrs. Hpoopendyke’.
logic.
“Oh, yes. Found it, didn't you?”
panted Mr. Hpoopendyke, os ho bumped
his head against the bureau, and Anally
climbed to a perpendicular. “Perhaps
you will flx my shirts so they won’t fall
out any more; and maybe you’ll have
sense enough to mend that lounge, now
that it has made Bi much trouble. If
you only tend to the house as I do to my
business, there’d nflver bo any difficulty
about losing a collar button.”
“It wasn't my fault—" commenced
Mrs. Hpoopendyke.
“Wasn't, eh? Have you found that
coal bill you’ve been lookvig for since
March?"
“Yog.”
“Have, eh! Now, where did you put
it? Where did you find it?”
“In your overcoat pocket."— Stanley
Huntley.
Streer Scenes In Naples.
The street scenes in Naples are a study
in themselves, mid would entertain a
traveler for 'lays even if he never en
tered a building. The curious garbs of
the 0: elesiasl ies, who seem to forms
large proportion of the inhabitants, the
grotesque appearance of the street ven
ders, with their wares piled up above
their heads, and hanging to nil parts of
| tlioir bodies, the brilliant drosses of the
middle-class women, mid the fantastic
, costumes of the beggars, who are pic
turesque in their verv nakedness,give va
i riety to the scene. The cat’s im at man,
with his viands strung on n long pole,
from which he detochoa a. piece and
curves it witli his knife for each of his
I lour footed clients, is n most extraordi
nary sight. The public scribe, protected
from the rays of the sun by un umbrella,
as ho sits at a table inditing
a love letter, perhaps, sos a
l Neapolitan damsel ns beautiful us
she kdlliterate, is useful us well m pic
turesque. Another remarkable person
age w the cigar scavenger, who nt night
goes about with his lantern hunting for
old Stumps, which he Bells to manufac
turers to be converted into the Allings
for frosh cigars. To these may be added
the zampognari or and a host
of other curious character, ranging any
where from a cardinal, attired in crimson
and riding in a gilded coach, to a baby,
bound up, after the manner of Neapolitan
babies, in the straightest of swaudling
clothes, and looking more like a roll of
linen just come from a draper’s shop than
a human being.
The advent of the zampognari in Na
ples always heralds the approach of one
of the more important Church festivals.
They come from their distant homes in
the mountains of the Abruzzi to Naples
and the surrounding towns to cele
brate the Immaculate Conception and the
advent of Christmas. Wearing pointed
felt hats, wrapped in long brown cloaks,
under which occasionally appears a goat
skin jacket adorned with large metal
buttons, their legs encased in tignt-fltting
breeches as far as the knee, and their
foot adorned with rage fastened by leather
thongs about the ankle and calf, they are
most pioturesque objects. Thus attired,
the zampognari go from house to house,
singing and playing before the little
gilded images of the Virgin and child,
and stopping before the street shrines,
where they repeat their monotonous
songs. On Christmas Eve, when there
is a spirit of liberality abroad, the znm
pognaro usually receives a large number
of coppers, ami as much in the way of
food and drink as his stomach can ac
commodate. When the festival is over
they return to their mountain homes,
thero to pass their time ns laborers or
shepherds until the next oecurs. The
bagpipers of the Abruzzi frequently act
as models, their picturesque costume
adapting itself readily to artistic pur
poses. - Hurper'e,
Gold In Asia.
Prejevslsky, the explorer, is now tell
ing the Russian audiences to whom he is
describing his last great journey that
“gold is very plentiful throughout North
ern Thibet.” He says he saw natives
mining near the sources of the Hoang
Ho fiver. They dug only one or two
feet b'-low the surface, ami their methods
of washing were of the most primitive
description. “Nevertheless,” says Preje
valsky, “they showed us whole handfuls
of gold in lumps ai big as peas, and
twice or thrice as big.” Mr. W. Meany,
'who has also visited the diggings of
Northern and Eastern Thilwit, corrobo
rates J’rejevalsky's estimate of their
great value. He says he saw gold in
nuggets from the size of a pea to that of
a hazel nut, almost perfectly pure and
nerfectly malleable. Prejevslsky ex
presses the opinion that at a lower depth
great treasures will lie found on this im
mensely elevated plateau. The deepest
and richest diggings observed by Mr.
Mesny were about sixteen feet below the
surface. In his opinion no metal will be
found below the bed of rock on which
this surface gold bearing stratum rests,
and in this respect he appears to dissent
from the opinion expressed by Prqje
valsky.
NEW SPRING STYLES
CLOTHING
rl li jST
—liiur l
Jffi i. ■ li CO.
Now Ready For
Men, Boys and Children.
CONDUCTORS’
AND
RAILROAD SUITS
A SPECIALTY.
SHIRTS, HOSIERY
AND
UNDERWEAR OF ALL KINDS.
t’ci'fi’ct nttiiiK niirui' iits uniamnteoit amt no
gooes inlsrcpreaonte<l.
JAS. A. ANDERSON & 00.,
Clothiers & Merchant Tailors,
(1 Whltehnll Street.
PEEK, WILSON & CO.,
DEALKftA IN
STAPLE and FANCY
Groceries.
Meats, Vegetables, Etc.,
a
25 Went Mitchell Street, Atlanta, Ga.
G-RJLISriD
SPRING OPENING I
J. BOYLAX
Hna just received uh fine a lino of
OLOTHINO
hm you will find in the city, tind <’ho»por tlinn
<’V(M* iM’foro. MciPm Huhn
From $3 up to S2O,
worth al least 80 per cent. more. Boys Nult.
FROMIiKI.r)O UP.
A bl« lot of odd Pants I’lxmiNG OUT AT
HALF I’HIl'K.
SHOES, Shoes, SHOES,
Hho<« cheaper than anybody.
WtIMF.N'H LACK from Ifflcts. up.
LAniEH' BUTTONS from snot* up.
A lineline of STRAW, WGOLsnd FUR HATH.
Fine Mackinaw Hats I'oi T 5 ets„ that will cost
SLIM) olsowhore.
Don't buy nJ Null of < 'lol lies, n puli- of Hhoo*
or'n Hitt'untll you examine my
Goods mid Prices,
J. BO VLAN.
128 Decatur street.
GIVE US A. CALL.
IF Y<>() WANT
DRUGS OR PRESCRIPTIONS
Compounded at ronsonablb prices, call st
O’BRIEN’S DRUG STORE,
Under Markham House, 20 Loyd street,
or 212 Marietta sln-et, where polite
attention mid satisfaction
are guarmitoed.
I have on hand n full lino of clogmil
Toilet Articles, Combs, Brushes
and Choice Perfumery.
JOHN T. STOCKS,
Wholesale and llutail Dealer in
JELLICO MOUNTAIN COAL,
AND
All Kinds of WOOD.
Office No. 20 NaM’fh Broad st.
Telephone No. 618, 527, or 131.1
mustangl
Survival of the Pitatl
a nmiT Mxninva that Hta ruiml .
situoxa Miitive aa vsami
MmMIMKTSSLffIIDTI
a RALM Fon KVRRT Wovwn orl
MAN AND n&AITi
The Oldest & Best Linlmentl
BVKR MADB IN AMBKJCA.
SALKS LARGER TKAnKVER I
Th« Masloan Miwtanr Liniment h**B
been known for mine than thirty five!
ye.av. a* Iho t>e«t of all Liniment*, fm*
Man mid It* »ale* to-day are®
larirar than ever. Il curat when all®
other, full, mid penetrate, akin, ttndon®
and muscle, to the vary bout. Sold®
averywb.rt.
tS6U
AUD VPWAMWk
TMe Nrw
CNAMHON
Joh Press
I. Uw >te>n<
e««. ehr.iieM
and M.lrat
rnnntß* i>r«M
♦ver a.'lO A
titnl *uarnn
We* Mhtlntae
tk'n. Voiir.l.e*
nude Semi t>w
elreulsr.
A. OlmattlaM,
I -1 _ -TIE— .... X — 41 VD Nt MM ML
- Nr vs \wrli.
House
WITHOVTTUinFD innMHNG VAVKHuudfP
the WftMhnbo.u-.ilng M n.| n UOVf ,, Wnrm in win.
«”r. enol hi summer. ABSOLUTS PREVFNTIVI
niUfOftt vvrmin of um i v kind. < owU nttHyiwlhlmb*
vnl> About nlnetj rem (K i0,.,n. .\~H dealer* for 11 ur
»ro* CHARLLS H. CONNER, MsmUnctiiw. '
LOVIsVILLK, KT.
Free Farms
ihe iiioAt »> ?in Ati Li ».'Mi -riml IM tn Am< s ii«Mk
Hurrtiun ird h\ proeiivruuN mining mA huuiuU 'tnr
Hie Uiwhn hih?.i?r ’ MtuniHV'tnf > rope
rrdMHl In isNA ThntiNnudM nr Acrre nt' Got nrn«
mftht I.iind, subji- ’t t<»lUi .'mptbm uulhomratmitl.
Lanth for Miin to nuiiml evlilfthe *f sltW jmr Acre.
I.oiu; rhnu. r.u'k hrh»t‘uiby immriiftecnnnU cboap
mllrowd i-Affte Kiftry AUvnllon ahownactUere For
mni s. pamphb’tH. rlo., a hlrva* COLOH AIM) LAND A
LOAN CO . I'lx iaUmiMyiihh it. hrnver.t 01. HoiMM.
AS f -Al »m al I oftphni innk o to p<"r <lny
with our Avmfmii-PhoL» Nora
Slllinl® nftriviivo b «iulrotl. rxorylhlnft sohlrftM/
tor uft II |mv ” big with other huMtw «. In sLYra,
Hhoim nt homv.or iromhon rtotaHum i nff.'nu sh ady
w.trki pn\N 300 mi aiM >»«'»* vrwi |»roth. Wo
uh.) vnpy Hii'l »m fc tyj kl i:ir>n* ail siyh's nnA
umlf. of |»or O|l|J trnltn. work auftiwft
ummi. no rink, |»nr th nUre trftft, ni-Miuitn
hook,” Mid 1 h» V.iAf I'AofooiMph*,*' ftiul Hnmplft Photo
iiuitio bj f‘rn|im It yi’m. im •mu noMpnUl. for
I.’via. Write to ilav, mime this Igf ml f*
p.qi. r amt attireF mp t e Photo VUg sg M C-’ M
L|iil|?m<-SIK’O „JHI Pau »|HL. N.Y WW VIW Jwlw
Salvo CORES DRUKKEIffIESS
t KSSkiSS
< • rt 4 i
v** N«. iWM«>4IhSL.No»YWk
1 CURE F|T§[
WhftnTaay vuvft i m»i inaan ujsrsly loTw w
tllm. »nd <*»>< h«’« Ih.m return Me'n.t
»l oure. I h»»» me* tn* <«•••» ut V' T *> ken V»V
L r*l.LlNO*lCkNlM.llr*len(|l»Sr '’•’’•“J"!
wrntSv te MH. U»» Vor.l I'*.**. »er*uM otMW »JW
r.11u.11. »e reaetn Iw »ol nnw rec.l'ins «<»!•
Mie* » irwllw •'"! • ft** •’ -Wf
Mni«4r <ll»* Siltr*.. *n.l r>»» OOlua >» •*•*• f*«
S’o' n. s.v .mA
■■■■■ffijEfflTATEinHß!
! ► You am allowed a/Vee trial r/tMrf. .f.iu* nt the UM
of llr. Ojre’» CeWtrate.l Voltaic Ml with I leeirie mua
Sinnory Appliance., tor the •iwedy n ll<>f and pen.
anent a urn iff A'mvtt. Dehtme. I.« ot lihxify.ntl
irnA.Mri, and all kindred troimle*. AJ»o for ot«njr
i other dtswunt*. Complete Nstoeatlon to Hrahh, VImJL
and Mnnh.uel (ra*reniee<t. No rlak I* Incurred. luum
ir.to.l panichlri In wmlrd m.vloiw mailed tree, lie aA.
d»™*lne VOLTAIC HK'.TCO.. MonhallZlineC
No Ropo Io Cut Oil Horse*' Manet, kk
Celebrated •KCLII’kK’ IIAI.TKR JftL
and HKIOI.K Combined, cannot agTTIK
be Hllituetl by »ny florae. Sample raf Utek
Haller fit any part ot 11. I». free, on ZAP>-’M||
receipt ot |i fu.1.l hr all SMbtlery.
Hardware and Harneaa liealcre
Special dlwmutlt t» the Trade, XIN I W W
liftihl for Prhm List WJMTT ' W
HKwp'' ■
ro wwnAeiftillv l«w Mnd f.w Wil tiky
WUMPlsrfs MosUwa ibis py«i
FOR TRI AL« hwH nun, brut klehim
p known, ft ftarndNlftUfti 'Vimmor
t<» winter keeper; .‘He- P'liferHieh’it.
v«ry wit nnd swtel; tom IVPwfn sr|ia
good for eaUns ThesMtreall very lor new nerd*
whlrh I wish fntro'liH'rd, an i mall all for «Um.*aranv
one for mokal. Jas Haah r.K**d Oruwftr,MA <bn<i irk
TBORSTOrSremTOOTHPOWDER
Meepln* Teeth Perhni and ChiMO llealibf.
ft 1 « Utb»t|.||. r* * M*i«l alftillD
r { ’ r A’ •*’»»!•*• Opt* i. kinJ.
I vllvlV 119 H M, Al
nJ !■ Nil' 1
|r Nwtk uft !»».'•* Making M«* iViman a««| Manito
ZS I !?.*** 10 • '*•» -■<Milsi.Uaaiaaa4l.Ob
« <1 has Ukfta Um Iva 4tn
tbe 'Aleo 'b«( * hag «r
tftmftitieo* a»»«f kA* flwm
alum.i unlvaraal Milalfe*
■ML
MVRHIY BRi'ft..
k Fans, Ta«
44 baa wxm U>« uvor
lhe puWu and how tanka
antong iha laftiting Math
due* ?i be
*' V...UU r*.
PENNYROYAL PILLS
"CH ICH ESTER'S ENGLISH.“
The Original and Only Uennlne.
?*!! “Oivyr. ••H*'** B»w.r**r weHhlea* iu.umlm*.
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