Newspaper Page Text
TIIE ADVANCE
ARLINGTON. GA.
FRIDAY. JUNE 16, 1882.
Kentuckey’s Sensation-
Persons Dying in Hart County
Without Illnei s Or Disease
About three weeks ago A/r. William
Downey, of Blackwell’s Piecinct,
died in s very singular manner.
TTis strength began failiegon Wednes¬
day without apparent cause, his flesh
fell away with alarming rapidity and
by Monday following he has absolute
ly dwindled away without having felt
sick or anfferei the slightest pain or
indisposition. When placed on his
death lied, a few hours before he died,
he was laughing and talking, and de~
dared he never felt better in hia life,
fiuob a singular und nuacconutahle
death naturally created considerable
surprise and wonder in the neighbor¬
hood where it happened.
But these were increased to conster¬
nation when, in a few daya after Mr.
Downey's death, his daughter, Miss
Hallie, who is about 22 years of age,
was taken exactly as her father wa«,
and without suffering the slightest
pain or sickness has grown weaker
and tbiuner each day, till she is a
skeleton of her former self, at our last
account she was lying speechless upon
wbat has doubtless proved her dueth-
bed ere this.
The physicians are completely non¬
plussed, aud are unable to form the
slightest idea as to the cause or nature
of their very strange nmladuy, and,
mystery, the sickbed of the young
lady has bam const .ntiy attended by
strange and unnatural nois -s—some¬
times seeming like the roar of a plan
ing mill tjieu like a sewing machine,
and again like many other tlnh,'s,
continually changing, but lmrdly ev-r
ceasing. It has thrown the whole
neighborhood into a fever of ixcite-
meut, and scores of persons have vis¬
ited the bouse where the young lady
fs sick and ure able to testify to the
above fact*.— Ex.
Lincoln Tunred to Stone.
Tbo attempt to steal the remains of
Mr. Lmcoln about three years since
is remembered by almost every one.
Ever since then the public, in fact ev-
ryhody, save a half dozen persons or
•o, iutimately, connected with the
Lincoln Monument Association sup¬
posed Mr. Lincoln's remains were eu
closed in the marble sarcophagus
which stands in the vestibule leading
to the crypts, where other members of
the family are entombed. This is not
so, ns your correspondent learned to\
day for the f.’rct time. All that re¬
mains of »lr. Lincoln has been buiied
in tho ground, under some portion of
the immense granite pile forming hi*
monument, ever since tho attempted
robbery, and are now iu a complete
state of petrification. This startling
statement is from one who knows, and
will be nows to all but a very few per¬
sons, as it was understood at the time
that the embnlmer's work at Wushs
ington immediately after the death of
Mr. Lincoln was not a success, but a
buugle. Soon after the remains were
entombed at this city, in 1865 66, it
was said that they wero in a bad state
of decomposition, and that the ern-
balm ing was not working. This
seem8 to have been an error, ns there
is no donbt but that the statement that
his remains have turned into stone is
true,— Springfield (Til) Special to St.
Lems Republican
A Rhyming Governor.
A newspaper man, commenting on
the apt quotations of Governor Long,
of Massachusetts, iu his proolamati <ns,
last fsll from one of Whitter’s poems
and this spring from the scriptures,
recalls an official communication iu
origiral rhyme made by Jonathan Jen
ninge, the first governor of Iodiana,
which is perhaps the only thing of tbs
kiud on record. Indiana wanted some
guns and ammunition, and the gover¬
nor sent the following to John O. Cal¬
houn, then secretary of war:
Dear John C..
I send to thee
For three great guns aud trimmings,
Pray send them to band,
Or yon‘fl be damned,
By order of Jonathan Jennings.
Governor of Indiana.
The costliest piece o» lace iu this
country, if not in the world, was to be
seen at A. T. [Stewart's, New York,
It consists of a flounce five yards long
aud a yard and a quarter in width, of
be finest Brussels poiut ever made. It
Is intended for the ex-Empress Ea-
«I00 •1U0,000,000 000ioo!?'\f° for the ,0 entire °?i * flounce °‘ or
drees- Of course it is not intended to
bs cu.t —} r . N. Sun,
A Dog's Funeral.
AVarly a year ago a gentleman died
in affluent circumstances at Kirkwood
and left a child ess widow. The bns-
baud, who never enjoy*-1 the prond
distictiou of being called a father, lav-
ished bis surplus affections on a fine
shepherd dog by the name of Fash.
Ibis canine was provided for in his
master S will by the setting aside of a
ceitam house aorf lot,the monthly rent
fiom which was to he appropriated
to‘DashV sole benefit during his nut-
urn! life. In this way the dog's
days were comfortably provided for,
and the gentleman’s wife w*s named
as ‘Dash’s’ guardian. Shortly after
her husband‘a death the lady.weut to
New York to assuage her grief, but
she didn't take the dog along. Iu
her absence Dash wus taken very sick,
aud a telegram informed her of the
animal's affliction. True to the last
will aud testament of her late husband
she telegraphed to employ the most
eminent physicians for the faithful
servant. In a few day* wires informed
her ‘Dash’ was dead. She admitted
of so delay, but immediately start
ed for 8t. Louis lo conduct the ob-
sequme and again act the chief mourn¬
er. Ariiviug here, a costly coffln
was provided and a hearse conveyed
‘Dash's* remain* to ftik Itidge Ceme
tery. At tout place they were inter¬
red with due solemnity at Ilia feet of
his dead master in the presence of the
widow, now in mourning for him.
A 8300 monmeut suitably
inscribed, stands at the head of the
husband's grave, while a lass pre¬
tentious one costing §150, rest* at his
feet to mark the place where Dash lies.
— St.Louis Qlobe Democrat.
Soaking Against Smut-
Mo-t good furmcr* have reported
their experience in favor of soaking
seed corn in weak brine before plant
ing, a* a preventative of bmut, though
not always with the sanction of what
arc known as advanced agricultural¬
ists. They have not b*eu uble to un¬
derstand how anything that can be
done to a seed will have any effect on
what is to happen to tbo grain that is
produced months afterwards. How¬
ever, those farmers who have tried it
have adhered to the practice, and we
suppose there is nothing more certain
than that these brine steeps do pre¬
vent the smut. Latterly, however,
Professor Brewer, of Yale college,
not only admits that it is good prac¬
tice, bnt shows ns the process by which
the smut progresses from its first es¬
tablishment on tho giaiu to its final
maturity in the head or ear. It ap¬
pears that the seeds or spores of the
fungus adhere by a stickey coat to the
grain. As soon ns the grain sprouts,
the fnngas spore sprouts also, and
semis its filaments into the plant,grow¬
ing ns the plant grows, and
to grow until the grain is about to
produce itself, when tho fungus
is also ready to reproduce itself, which
it does in the form of smut as we
it; the smut being a nest of spores
ready fbr reproduction, The
is made very clear. We see how
brine is ussfnl. It destroys the fun¬
gus spores, but not the grain, At
times the damnge done by smut
is very serious — Germantown Tele¬
graph.
Four Years of Gayety.
Every year a number of young
stray aside from paths of rectitude
»ud entor what seems to them a life
of ease and gayety. To lire without
work or responsibility is to some na¬
tures the great object of life, and
there is but one way iu which women
can do it.
One such died forty-eight hoursago,
having first been turned out of a house
to the patrons of which she was no
longer attractive. Of eourse she had
no money, no home, no friends, snch
women never have, although hun¬
dreds of men hare offered them ardent
adoration Dastitate and dying, her
only possible bod a noisome floor in a
police station or a cleaner but colder
doorstep, her thoughts turned back¬
ward and she staggered to the par¬
sonage of a church, and as she beg¬
ged the prayers of the pastor she
found herself in the very reom where,
four years before, a happy, handsome
girl, she had married an honest
working man. A few boms later she
expired in an asylum, and yeoterday
her funeral expenses were defrayed by
money collected at a mission for disso-
lute women and thieves. She had
enjoyed as gay a life and for as Iou-
a time as mostwomau of her class,
and her wretched and pitiful end was
not as miserable as many others have
, ' uS9r&L Aside from all
tions of morality and honor a gay
life does not seem to be worth its
price. — New Fork Herald.
The Modern Boy.
Hi* loving mother said: ‘If you
take some of the castor oil, I‘11 let you
go to the circns.’,
‘How much?' he cautiously inquir
ed.
‘Oil only a spoonful—just a spoon-
ful.‘
‘And you‘11 give mo some sugar be-
rides)*
‘Of course I will, a big lump *
He waited till she began pouriug
from the bottle, and then asked:
'And you will give me ten cents,
too? 1
‘Yes, of coarse. 1
‘And you will buy me a shoo-fly
kite?* he went on, seeing his advan
t«ge.
‘I guess so ‘
‘No kite, no ilel he s*id as he step-
ed back.
‘Well, I* 11 buy you a kite, 1 she said,
filling up the spoon.
‘And a velocipede?*
‘Ill think of it. 4
‘You cant think—no oil down me!
he exclaimed, looking around for his
hat.
‘Here, I will tease father to: and I
know he will. Come now, swallow it
down.'
‘And you’ll buy me a goat.*
‘Yes*
'Aod a coach dog?’
‘I canDot promise that?*
‘AH right no dog no ile.‘
‘Well, 1*11 ask your father.*
‘And you‘11 buy mo two hundred
marbles?'
‘Yes, now fake it down.*
‘And a pony?'
‘Ob! I couldn’t do that. Now be a
good boy and swallow it down.*
‘Oh, yes, I ll swallow that stuff, I
will!’ he said,as he clapped on bis hat.
‘You may fool some other boy with a
circus ticket and a lump of brown
giigar, but it‘11 take hundred-dollar
pony to trot that iledown my throat!*
For the Benefit of the Heartless.
If a woman once errs, kick her down,
Kick her down;
If misfortune is hers,
Kick her down. .
Though her tears fall like rain,
Aud she never smiles again,
Kick her down.
If a man breaks her heart,
• Kick her down.
Redouble the smart,
Kick her down.
Aud if low her condition,
On, on to perdition,
Kick her down.
Aye! pass her by on the other side;
speak no word of ei conragement to
her; measure not her fall by her tem¬
perament or her temptation, but by
frigidity of your own unsolicited
Pharisaical heart. Leave no door of
escape open; close your homes and
your hearts; crush every human feel
ing in her soul; teach her that the
Bitile and religion are fables; check
tbo repentant prayer on her Magda-
line lips; thrust her back npoa
cruel tender mercies of those who re
joice at her fall, send her forth with
her branded beauty, like a blight aud
a mildew; stand aside, for thou art
holier—holier than the Sinless, whose
feet were batued with her tears and
wiped with the hairs of her head.
Cast the first stone at her, ah, thou
whited sepulchre, though those
lips could say: ‘Neither do I condemn
thee. Go, and sin no more, ’—Select-
ed.
Whales at Tybee.
Two young whales, measuring
fourteen feet, according to the Savan¬
nah Recorder, came up in high tide
on the island of Tybee, in some sluice-
way. The tide receded, leaving them
there. One of them, in its efforts to
get back seaward, wounded itself so
that it died. The other v 6ne, which
wus alive, though apparently in great
distress, was comfortably provided for.
They proceeded to dig a sluice of suf¬
ficient depth to admit a necessary
supply of water to keep It alive, and
will probably provide sustenance in
the shape of fish until it can be effect¬
ually secured and transferred to a re¬
ceptacle or canal that will be dug
next to tbe Ocean Honse. The moth¬
er of these piscatorial cubs is in the
greatest trouble immsginable, as she
is in sight of the beach in deep water,
bellowing and throwing np the saline
fluid frantically, in despair for the loss
of her young. No doubt tbe capture of
the old lady will he accomplished as
soon as a knowledge of her presence
in shore is obtained by the whaling
schooners now off ihe coasts, provided
she does not make a simular attempt
at inland navigation, while the spring
tido prevails.
The value of slaves in Georgia was
over $34,000,000.
HERE AND THERE.
CLIPPINGS FROM OUR EXCHANGES.
The Rountree case cost Clarke
county $2,000.
The GainsvilU, Ga , tannery turns
out 4,200 lbs. of leather weekly ^
i n Elberton. tbc othpr day#
a rain a large turtle fell from the
clouds into the streets,
We go and fancy that every body ia
thinking of us. But lie is not; he is
like us; he islhinking of himself.
It is sail] that the 1-tte Jesse James,
the notorious bandit, has a sister
living in Gordon county, in this State.
A Statistician estimates that the
people of the United States have to
pay tweuty-tlnee dollars a minute
for congress while in session.
Brother Chevea of the Dawson Jour
nal, hud his town oat crop thrashed
last week. He made 330 bushels on
three acres. Good for an editor.
An ark 200 feet long ia being built
by an Iowa man, who believes that a
second flood will take place in 1883.
He intends,however,to take passengers
at §3,000, and expects to make a for¬
tune.
“Married. Mr. John Day to Miss
Jane Week.** A week is lost, hut a
day is made. Time should not com¬
plain. There soon will be little days
enough to make up the week again.—
Ex.
This oat raising business has got to
be stepped or tbo farmers of Georgia
will have to rent an adjoining'stale to
stack their straw in, as the ground on
which the oafs is raised will not hold
all of the straw.
The Hawkinsville News is responsi¬
ble for the story that afeitizen of that
place dug from bis patch a potato that
made a large mess for five hungry
persons. It wm so large it had to
be boiled in a watb kettle.
Several aged Mexican women were
kneeling on the bare floor ot a church,
moaning in prayer. “Well,** said a
looker-on, “don't that beat the devil?’
“I gners thats what they are try¬
ing to do,“ was the quiet reply of his
companion.
A maiden lady said to her little
nephew: ‘New, Jonny, yon go to
bed early,and always do so, and you’ll
be rosy-cheeked and handsome when
you grow up.* Johnny thought over
this a few minutes and then observed:
‘Well, aunty, you must have sat up a
good deal when you were young.'
Because it has transpired that sun
flower is one of the oldest forms of
decoration in the art of ihe Zuni In’
dians, it having hern iu existence
among them for centuries, the Balti¬
more American pronounces Oscar
Wilde a fraud, and demands that Ire
give np the 820,000 he has gathered
in (hi? country.
It his ill IMiii
of the merchants and planters along
the 8. IV. Extention to our complete
stock of
HARDWARE,
and solicit their patronage.
All Orders will Attention. Have Our Prompt
We are manufacturer’s agents for the
“Orange* 1 Rifle and Bucking
AND THE
‘Old Hickory” Wagon.
SHEFFIELD & BELL,
sep23 Albany, Ga.
Genius Rewarded,
—OR THE—
Story of tie Seiitti Macliis
A handsome little pamplet, blue gilt
gold cover, with numerous engravings
will be
given away
to any adult person calling for it. at any
brancli or sub-office of the Singer A/anufac-
turing Company, 6 or wiiTbe's^i' ^ by ^
P ?mm our“ y oE 0n a
Unce
may 6 New York.
a x. ketton, a**,
Keyton.Ga.
Sav. Fla. & Western R.R
General Manager’s Office, ( $
Savaxxaii, May 21st, 1S80.
YAN AND AFTER SUNDAY, May 22nd
VA Passenger Trains on tills Road will run
as follows:
FAST MAIL.
Leave .Savannah daily at, ,,... .3:2o p.m
Leave aesup u ......1:4o p.m
Leave Tebeauville u ......5:5o p.m
Arrive at Callahan u ......7:41 p.m
Arrive at aeksonville U ll ......8:40 p.m
Leave Jacksonville ......7;35 a.m
Leave Callahan • t ......8:42 a.m
Arrive at Teheauville “ .....ll:lo a.m
Arrive at Jesup (< .....12:85 p.m
Arrive at Savannah ......3:00 p.m
Passengers from .Savannah for Bruns¬
wick take this train, arriving at Brunswick
G:oo p. m.
Passengers leave Brunswick at0:3o a.m.,
arrive at Savannah 3;oo p. m.
Passengers for Darien take this train.
(dally Passengers leaving Macon at 7:00 a. m.
with this including for Sunday) Florida. connect at Jesup
train
Passengers Jesup from Florida by ttiis train
connect at with train arriving in
Macon at 7:50 p. m. (daily including ,Sun¬
day.)
Drawing 72oom Cars Jacksonville. on this train be¬
tween Savannah and
JACKSONVILLE EXPRESS,
Leave Savannah. daily at 10:30 p.m
Leave Jesup il 2:4o a.m
Leave Tebeauvillo 4.35 a.m
Arrive at Cailaban 7:11 a.m
Arrive at Jacksonville “ 8;Io a.m
Arrive at Live Oak “ lo:45 a.m
Leave Live Oak t 2:80 p.m
Leave Jacksonville r 5:25 p. m
Leave Callahan r 0:25 p.m
Arrive at Teheauville 9:lo p.m
Arrive at Jesup 11:05 p.m
Arrive at Savannah 3.00 A.M
Pullman Palace Sleeping Cars daily be¬
tween Savannah and Jacksonville,Charles¬
ton and Jacksonville and Macon and Jack¬
sonville.
No change of ears between Savannah and
Jacksonville and Macon and Jacksonville.
Passengers Jesup leaving ii/acon 7:30 p. m.
connect at with this for Florida
daily. Florida
Passengers Jesup from by this train
connect at with tnpn arriving at
Macon 7 :o5 a. m. daily. .
Passengers Cedar from Savannah Florida for Gaines¬
ville, Keys and Transit Road
take this train.
Jlontieello, Passengers from Savannah for Quincy Madison,
Tallahassee and take
this train.
Monticello Passengers from Quincy, Tallahassee,
and Madison take this train
9:lo meeting sleeping cars at Teheauville at
p. m.
ALBANY EXPRESS.
Leave .Savannah daily at 4:15 p.m
Leave Jesup “ 7:o5 p.m
Leave Tebeauville “ 9:3o P.M
Leave Dupont “ 11:45 p.m
Arrive at Thomasville “ 5:oo a.m
Arrive at Bainbridge “ “ 8:00 A.M
Arrive at Albany, 8:45 a.m
Leave Albany 4:45 p.m
Leave Bainbridge U 5:15 p.m
Leave Yliomasviile, “ 8:45 p.m
Arrive at Dupont i: 1:45 a.m
Arrive at Tebeauville, “ 4:oo a.m
Arrive at Jesup “ 0:25 a.m
Arrive at Savannah “ 9:15 a.m
Sleeping cars Albany run through between Sa¬
vannah and and Jacksonville and
Montgomery Connection'at daily without change.
Albany daily passenger
trains both ways on Southwestern Railroad
to and from Macon, Eu/auia, Montgomery.
Mobile, New Urleans, etc.
lachicola Mail steamer and Columbus leaves Bainbridge for Apa¬
.Saturday. every Tuesday and
Close connection at Jacksonville dailv
At. (Sundays Augustine, excepted)for Green Cove Spring
ferd, landings Palatira, Enterprise, ,S'an-
and all on the At. John’s
river.
Trains on B. & A. R. R. leave junction
going west at 11:37 a. m., and for Bruns¬
wick at 4:4o p. ra. daily except Aunday.
.Berths Through and tickets Drawing sold Room and Car '.Sleeping Car
accommo¬
dation secured at Bren’s Ticket Office, No.
22 Bull street aud at the company’s depot,
foot of Liberty street.
JAS. Gen. L. Pass. TAYLOR,'
Agent.
J. A. Tvsox, J/aster of Transportation
II. A. HALVE.?,
General Manager
THE OLD RELIABLE
Eaiij Teleirapl and Messenger
NEW EDITORS, NEW MANAGEMENT AND
NEW STYLE.
The daily Telegraph and Messenger is
now recognized it as at live the head of Georgia
journalism, is a paper in every
sense of the without word, fear, discussing men and
measures favor or affection
looking only to the welfare of Georgia and
the protection of private rights. It believes
in progress, and will lend every eiiere-v to
enlfghten higher the populace, of and lead them to a
appreciation their political rights
and material resources. It contains the
Associated Press dispatches—the latest
news from every source. It has a lively
local department; contains the’latest mar-
Ket reports,and the local market corrected
daily by the leading merchants of the city
It covers all Middle Georgia aud ail the
southern and southwestern part of the
Atate in advance of every other daily paper
pub/isheh la Georgia. Our mail facilities
unsurpassed. Jet everybody who wants
to be posted and to keep up with the polit¬
ical canvass now being inaugurated, which
will prove the liveliest ever made in Geor¬
gia, subscribe at once for the daily Tele¬
graph and Messenger.
Perms —One year, S10; six months, ?5:
three months, $2.50; one month, $1.
THE PEOPLES FAVORITE
m, me TTr weekly 1 1 Telegraphand m , - Messneer
Jt is the fluty of every man to make his
noine pleasant and as attractive as possible
A good newspaper, pure in toue anfl ele
vatinp in its characteristics, is a most wiiuTr es-
sential requisite to that enfl. The
‘ EI ; E( filled ;J* ArH c Sixtt-Focr and MessINGER, with its
well Columns, meets
just such a demand, and no family iu Mid-
wUhout S n Uth ' rfSterc Georgia shou!d bc
Without it.
In addition te the carefully selected
miscellany from the daily edition, and the
market reports, there is every week a spien-
did story; also valuable extracts for the
“Farm and Home’’ department, specially
prepared for the Weekly.
TEA'mA—O ne year $2; six months 81.
Clubs of ten to one address $15 a year.
Agents wanted at every Hanson, post-office. Address
J. F. Manager,
Macon, Ga.
dress $5 to Stiuson $2B£ & d ;u“ Portland, tHA
Co., Maine.
l«*v fe£ATAL06 SEED U ^ f 9
witn which other varieties in proportion, five Seed a large Farms, portion will be or
all were grown on my
round in my Vegetable and Flower £eed Cat-
aloorue for ISS2, which wffl be SENT FREE need
to all who apply. Customers of last season
not write for it. All seed sold from my establishment
warranted to be both fresh and true to name, so far
that should it prove otherwise I will refill the order
gratis. The original introducer of Early Ohio and
Burbank Potatoes, Marblehead Early Corn, the Hub¬
bard' Squash, Marblehead Cabbages, vegetables. Phinney’s 1 invito
Melon, and a seore of other new vegetables
the patronage of the public. New Marblehead, a spe¬
cialty.^ JAMES j. h. GREGORY, Mass,
WJ0
tiSSa a i *1 Ml
BROWN’S IRON BITTERS are
a certain cure Tor all diseases
requiring a complete tonic; espo
ciati y Inrligestio n, Dyspepsia, Inter*
mittent Fevers, Want of Appetite,
Losa of Strength, Lack: of Energy,
etc. Enriches the blood, strength*
ens the muscles, and gives new
lifo to tiro nerves. Acts like a
charm on the digestive organs,
removing all dyspeptic symptoms,
such as tasting the food, Belching,
Heat in the Stomach, Heartburn,
etc. The only Iron Preparation
that will not blacken the teeth or
give headache. Sold hy all Drug>
gists at $1.00 a bottle.
BROWN CHEMICAL CO. -
Baltimore, M(L ,
Pi-; Hint all Iron Bitter. are made by Brown Cosmic
C o. aud have crossed red liucs and trade mark on
BSWARg OF IMITATIONS.
THE BEST
OF ALL
LINIMENTS
FOR MAM AND BEAST.
51 exIca nttn: sitatig .Ynlmei 8?een the
1 itha
Known to millions all over tho world a«
the accidents only sale reliance for the relief of
and pain. It is o. medicine
above price and praise— the beat or its
« ind. i or every form of external pain
MEXICAN
I., I Mustang l !cne Liniment t*'atca flesh is without and muscle an equal,
Oou*-—making to
Islble. ■ the continu-
Bjj'c Brute imeffect^upon Creation llumnn Flesh ami
ul T1 Mexican aro equally wonder-
■* ' *e
I ■ EliJ w«a S 1 .#■*«—. |g M n Bag a n Ifa —
M E |W| |J 1 M PI if
■ w w 9 IniliSN
Lmiment is needed by somebody in
every house. Every day brings news of
the agony of ail awful scald or burn
subdued., of rKenmatlo martyrs rc«
stored, or a -valuable Horse or ox
saved by the healing power of this
LINIMENT
ssstfBSKasRr* H
Rheumatism, Swellings, JSurxigl StHT
Joints, Contracted Muscles,
and Scalds, Cuts, Bruises and
| ?P Mings, rnins > „ htifmcss, *’® la J.nmr.ness, Bits* and Oltl
■ *«rea, rieeis, i’to«twic,,t hni>iai„8,
0 without £"*
e *se. It heals scars. .
8 For tbe Brute Creation it cures I
8pr » i " , > s * vln, »:r. Stiff Joint*,
„
fOs, Spavin, Horn. Thrush, Scratches, Ringbone, Wil'd-1
ld A''??’ * > .° n tT,1 > Film np«n
e wffi Ts.^
Stable cud Stoch lard are liable
Tho Mexican Mnstang Liniment
ernes and never cllsanpoints ■
and 11 “> positively,
THE BEST
OF ALL
■
Twin a
FOB MAN OB BEAST.