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About Savannah daily evening recorder. (Savannah, GA.) 1878-18?? | View Entire Issue (July 19, 1880)
ttWWWWiI D A I L Y ^ \n. EVEZSTIN" G g ft j p <1 r FIN l_79ji V P rw V? •A 1 X'&l lie » J T71 I* % r L i'XX'A m !*1 r,n tmr • . ■ 0 m v w VOL IV.—No. 93. THE SAVANNAH RECORDER R. M. ORKLES, Editor. PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING, (Saturday Excepted,) jBl .1181 BAY By «T. STERN. The Recorder is served to subscribers, every part ol the city by careful carriers. Communications must be accompanied tbe name of tbe writer, not necessarily publication, but as a guarantee of good faith. Remittance by Check or Post Office must be maue payable to tbe order of the lisher. We will not undertake to preserve or rejected communications. Correspondence on Local and general mat ters of interest solicited. On Advertisements running three, 3ix, and twelve months a liberal reduction from oui regular rates will be made. All correspondence should be addressed corder, Savannah, Georgia. The Sunday Morning Recorder will the piace ol the Saturday evening edition which will make six full issues for the week. 4^*We do not hold ourselves responsible the opinions expressed oy Correspondents. Ihe Becohder is registei'ed at Post Office in Savannah as Second Class Matter. Some Inquiries to Which an An¬ swer is Asked. Editor Constitution : I see a good deal said in your paper and others about the able and efficient course of Major Ely as Attorney . General of our .‘.State, and the people are asked to in¬ dorse him by a nomination and elec¬ tion. The people waut to kuow the facts about the manner in which each officer has discharged his duty. Now, it is reported on what we con¬ sider good authority, that Major Ely has been very prosperous in bis office. It is known he has had a number of cases against railroad companies in the State for taxes. The principles upon which the roads are taxed are said to have been settled in the main by the courts during office Colonel Hammond’s term of as Attorney General. Since that time it is said the railroad companies have been willing and ready to settle according to the de¬ cisions made by the courts laying down the rules of law on that subject; but that Major Ely has usually pro¬ ceeded against them for a much larger sum than they were liable to pay, thus getting up what appears to be big cases in court, and that after a litigation has compromised and taken about what the railroad companies were willing to pay without litigation, and that he has then divided about twenty-five per cent, from the amounts collected for fees and paid the balance into the Treatury. It is said he has collected about the following sums from the following railroad companies and paid in the amounts named to the treasury and kept the rest for lees : Collected from Georgia R. R....!? 40,000 Paid into treasury............... 28,000 Kept for fees..................... 12,000 Collected from Central R. R... 96.000 Paid into treasury............... 75.000 Kept tor fees..................... 21.000 Collected from Atlantic and Gulf jt. R...................... 60,000 Paid into treasury............... 56 000 Kept for fees..................... 13.000 Colleoted from Augusta aud Savannah R. R................ 10,000 Paid into treasury 8,000 Kept for fees...... 2,000 Whole amount colleoted from the four railroad companies. 215,000 Whole amount paid into the treasury from the four roads 167,000 Whole amount returned as fees in addition to his regular salary 4b ' 0W These T , surna may not be . exactly ac curate, but they are believed to be a very thrifty close^ business, approximation. good salary This and $43.- is a a 000 feesou four railroad cases out of money collected before it was paid into the treasury, on cases that could have beeti compromised at tbe same rates without any htigatiou. If there is any circumstantial error in these figures, \\ecall on Colonel Liv to make it right by stating to the public just how much he has collected for the btate, giving the name of the company and an itemized statement in each case The people have a right to know the truth, and they call on the Attorney General to publish a complete and ac curate statement of the amounts he has collected and now much ho paid into the treasury. Mr Attorney we have a right to kuow ! Let us your answer. It has been suggested by some one that probably General Toombs got some part of these enormous tees charged the State and people for legal 8ei\ices, but we cannot suppose this to be true, as hundreds of citizen* heard General Toombs say he Census Notes; Warrenton shows up a population of one thousand. There is a negro woman in Liberty county who claims to be 140 years of age. Census ofcilyof Marietta in was 1,S88. Census in 1S80, 2,229, an increarse of 314. Murray county has a population of S.oOu, an increase of 1,818 since the census of 1870. 7 S e c? V 8 in fifin'onfiQA °i^n b iQ C 8 QA- * 0 7 m . i 1Sb q?o° °‘ iT 14: " ’ 949 1 1 L^de j county , had , population - < 1 a 3 Olo in 1870. Now^ it numbers 4,- 613, an increase of I,5i6. Elberton has increased about 20 in habitants since the census were taken., ^P^ The ar d census a °d onward returns for is her Burke motto. county | ; show a population of 27,o00—an crease o. ten thousand during the lasi 6 ’ ! Air Warren eounty . claims , . something . . over ll.OoO. These % u res show an increase the ol last something-over notwitnstanding 2,000 souls | since the fact census, large ] tuat a portion of the { county has since been taken off and given to McDuffie. on® P T latl ° n °\ Athe aS numbe r c 6,100. i Tbwiei wilhia the u new city limits. Coouting all within the old limito, which includevarious suburban settlements, the population amount, to more than 7,200. ,hS ure * a,e hardly , ,, as large , ae many had claimed. but they show an increase of 70 per cent, since the las census, which is equal to the growth of any city in Georgia, except Atlanta. Paper Barrels. An exchange describes the process uae( ] j a the manufacture of paper bar iels, kegs and cans from paper pulp, and says it is done wholly by pressure b y screw or toggle joint, or both cora bined. The barrel is made on a suape or form to make the inside; and outside 0 f this is another to make the outside, tbe inner form being hinged in sections to admit of it foldiug on itself tor the removal of the barrel. The outer form contracts by the action of screws, self-’ operating, during the process of shap j rj g tbe barrels. Oue machine is capa The b le of produing 200 barrels per day. heads of the barrels are produced T5y sTmTar BeaneTfelit'Bn 'a mimE'sjmj- i er machine. These are discs with a r i m slightly piojecting on one face. In gome cases both heads are cemented in and straightened by an iron hoop at each end. When removed from the ma¬ chines the barrels, begs, heads, etc., are placed in a kiln or drying room, where they remain from three to twenty-four hours, according to sizt and the degree of heat admitted to the i room. The barrels are coated inside ! when required, by a resistant varnish, j and are painted or varnished outside. They are adapted for flour, sugar an I j any dry substances, for ketosene, lard or any liquid, and kegs are made for powder, and cans for other mater; 8 These indestructible, vessels are to be leak, practically cannot are light and easilv handled. Coiigressioual Candidates. Iii the First district Col. Nichol- a; —j pears to stand a fair chance ot iv election, but both the Republicans an Independents have tneir aspiratiou.-:. 1 urner, ol Brooks, seems to have tht j i inside track in the Second, but Tete Smith’s friends are active. ■ Gen. Phil Cook has it all his own in the J 1 ™' 1 - Hou ’ Ailefi 1 jrt having retired from the , race. I l i the i '°« rih are having a .. Co,on f ^ ou £ OHt as lV \ ^pendent 1 Us 18 against als0 Ur Dr ed Persons t0 run arm j ° Lf ° 1 . '?* *, 1 w '' TT Hu w , ‘ s ^ * nd ip K D r I - 1 Ue ».e mwtiooed »■><! . tope. , nts,n ‘ Flfth ; if Hon N. J. Hammond » nominated it ruay bepul J a cerlaiuty that Hulsey will be in tbe ,, \ Ace : 1 t di tho ^:xth, Hon. J. H. Llount , i j mootmpj with a htt.e scattered oppoe. ' tl0n m the upper counties, but hie b r ^P e <; . t8 are good. 1 L-rt el i on is booming in the Seventh, t and tlie or S* m; - ed are trying to in j^ him uce Co!ouel Jim Erowu to rUL against i * Aleck Stephens will take his skillet” triumphantly through the Emhth. d Emory Speer will probably have to fight Jtl. P. Bell in the Ninth. ' A Fool Once More. “For ten years my wife was cor. ;!>.•. to her Led with such a com plica r i a c. ailments that no doctor cou.d tell what was the matter or cure her, aud I us Li 3 ' up a small fortune in humbug stc Six months ago I saw a United State fi<g with Hop Bitters on it, and I thought I would be a fool once more, I tried it, but my folly proved to wisdom. Two b tiles cured her, sh . now as well a strong as any m -.s ; wi;e, and it co?t me only two do! lar. ISuch folly pays.— II. TU. Detroit, JL teered in these cases for the common¬ wealth ; that he ‘ volunteered to do fend the rights of hie old mother State ,\ to “vindicate the sovereignty of the people.” So now can any one believe for a moment that General Toombs would volunteer to get into these cases and then charge the people enormous fees for his services ? We have no right to charge such bad faith and malprac¬ tice to General Toombs; and we must conclude the Attorney General kept all he collected that was not paid into the treasury. At any rate we feel that we are entitled to a full and accurate ment. Let us have the facts just as they are. The People. \Y ho Freed the Slaves? Nothing is more common than the assertion by Radical editors and speak¬ ers, that the nation was saved and the slaves fireed by acts and might of the Rpublican party. This assertion is false. Slavery was abolished by the proclama¬ tion ot President Lincoln, and which said proclamation was issued as a war measure only. It was neither a Republi an or Democratic measure, but was one of the means devised by tbe President for effectually carrying on the war. The nation was saved by the army and navy and by no party whatever. The army in turn was composed of men of all political faiths together with a vast number who knew and cared nothing lor politics; we have seen state¬ ment made without contradiction, that there were some regiments of the army composbd ol Democrats only. No man can now state with any degree of ac¬ curacy how the army was divided on political questions. But I think it safe to say that it contained fully as many Democrats as Republicans. Something, pernaps, may be learned on this subject by looking over the list ot the army. Ike^ Republicans can parade their Grant, bheridau, Sherman, Burnside, Hayes, Logan, Garfield, and a few others of lesser note, while the Cleilan,^ Democracy^ buiith, can show franklin, Hancock, Porter, Me ierry, Scohfield, fepinold.Slocum,Farns worth, Palmer, beigle, and I know not bow many more whose blood was shed or offered to save the integrity of the nation; in fact a lew years ago it was published as a matter of current know ledge that two-thirds of the living major generals were Democrats. Under these circumstances the claim Thatf slavery was abolished or the Union saved by any political party is absurd and the arrogance of the claimants is only excelled by their wanton perver¬ sion of history. No, the blood of Demo¬ crat, Republican, negro,Indian,French¬ men from Canada, Irishmen, fresh from the Emerald Isle, Germans direct from the Rhine, Swiss from the Alps, and Italians, from the Sunland, was all mingled in a common stream to save the nation. The war was not oue of politics, and its honors appertain to no political organization. The result of the examination is this; No party freed the slaves. No party saved the Union. That both objects were accomplished, we are grateful not to party, but to man¬ hood. The living Grant and Hancock is representatives of army officers, and the dead privates, whose remains bleached the hills and valleys of all the land as representatives of our brawn and might, these saved the Union, while Republicanism, embodied in skulking bounty jumpers and pious cant and fraud was waxing fat in its iniquity and shame.— Charleston Mer¬ cury. Canadian law requires the previous announcement of every marriage, or a license from a County Clerk, and the latter procedure costs about 87. The consequence is that numerous couples cross over into the United States to united. Detroit clergymen and tiew.io h tint JmI of this busings. The Herald of that city says that a dollar was the fee formerly, but $2 ia usually demanded. The iknot j n g j d a reported conversation after had been tied: “Now, ^2 if you please,” remarktd the justice urbanely to the bridegroom. “I’ve no money •• !l that individual, turning to his ove; “You pay tbe r centdemen.’’ The \ ady turned with fire io her eve "p ay b j m yourself No money did you say? You’ve got plenty of money anU q know it .” "Come now, Sally, 8 t 0 p that nonsense, and don’t be givin’ ( be gentleman so much trouble after be ’ s c fone so much for ve; give him tbe For me, is iff I guess it’s f or y 0llj ^oo, and you’ll pay him if he j a pa i ( i at all.” But the groom tinued to insist that he was penniless, down until finally the bride reached into the folds of her voluminous dress and produced the $’J. --- m m m ---- Gen. Patrick Henry James, post ! master at New York under Grant, and for many years an ardent Republican. has turned his back upon the party of frauds and shams, and has unequivo eady iigh. proclaimed for Hancock aud Eng He does so in a letter over his own signature, The cry is still they SAVANNAH, MONDAY, JULY 19, 1880. ■MMUnMtt Twins. The following amusing story is told the Quitman county correspondent 0 f the (Juthbert Appeal: “There are tw j n brothers living in this county so much alike that it is hard to distin one from the other, One ‘ them tells a laughable incident that occurred when they first c.sme to this parr, of Georgia. They stopped in Outlibert to make some purchases. One of them walked into a hardware ? 8tablis h ment t0 bay P ots * ovens - skii ' let c spiers . , and other utensils pensable in a well yrov’ded kitchen, The articles were bought, paid for and left in the care of a clerk until called for. The purchaser walked out and in a few minutes his brother went into t be store to make similar purchases. The clerk politely informed him that he had jusr made a purchase of the 3 and they were then in the 01 . e . The second purchaser told him he guessed be was mistaken as he hae never been in the store before, Ths c!erk wag 3 , toDisbed . Rethought his mdrj vvaa gimplv j oking . H e look, ed at him in amazement. But the brother WrtS in sober earnest, and re _ peatftd that it was his first visit to the store. Seeing that it was perfectly useless to try to convince his customer tbat te bad been io the rtor. belote, toe clerk dwind!ed int0 si i enoe a „d 8old hjs man the \ Sime cooki uten8 j lfl , Tbe K9oit m delivered, and pome time after the second brotber .„ exit „, e firat brother entered the store and asked for the goods % he btH ht . Tbe derk wl>8 con Bnded Stepping rolling trod behind the counter and no bis sleeves, ho excla.mcd: ‘Sira: n I have had enough of your contouiuiH foolishness, and I am tired of it. You have made fun at me as long as I intend to put up with it, and now you have got to stop it. You think you are mighty smart, and if you tool with me two—' At this critical moment the second brother stepped into the store, and, seeing how matters were, made a hasty explanation, when all th ree enjoyed a big laugh.” General Beauregard’s Denial. According e> to the New Orleans Picayune, Gen, Beauregard declares there is r.p truth whatever in the Gin cirir-dti C'' mlnerc Ht Vs lory - fr om Tole¬ do, Ohio, that he once accepted an in¬ vitation to dine with Gen. Hancock only on condition that “those flags’’ should be removed. Ho says: < c As to my ever refusing to sit at a table tvhere old friends were io meet once more to shake hands over the bloody chasm of the past. Muse the ‘old flag’ waved over th ble, it is simply absurd I never v ...vd agaiust the ‘old flag,’ but fought • principle ; that is, to de triid, as firmly believed, our threat U*«); Jnational rights. That old fl -g - 1 O • '• 2 t 1 as much to us as to the ; t .(Led, more ho, for the moi t:t i •oi.u Sou’ Spangled Banner’ was smig ol a hern poet and patr iot, \\ iieu we appealed to the sword we had to abide by its decision, which wo have constantly done, notwithstanding the provo at ion of the abominable re coustru iti n laws, which have disap pointed even their originators. I w as one ot the first Confederate officers a; ; :y after the war, who quiet and peaceable submission to its consequences, advising our people to turn their attention to rebuilding h .mes and to the cultivation of our fi-irile soil, feeling confident that : 0J ? e ‘ or later the South would regain itsimiueiKe in the government of the com Gy. Saould any part of the North OVM ;-^^>*pt secession, they will w‘e her rn, South is in earnest in its o ; the Union and the old flag. ‘ Ti ° ' ienerK; A fancock rl i "‘" a, llla " 1bc wr °f>8 . Democratic ' . ouly harbmger of the » a ta E . - -----—--- Daring the iranco-German war a mai named Teule was captured by the Prts.-ians and taken to Germany, but on the way he attempted to escape, and , Q 10 doing nearly killed a sentry, and wai condemned to be shot. Bv a mktake of the jailer, however, Teole wa. placed in the cell ot a prisoner comemn : to ten years’ confinement in a ftrtre ; : and the latter was led out shot i: error. M hen Teule com pr^ien e. ] thc mistake that had been esolved to leave the itie in sir error, and abstained from wrt o his family in France, Ma while is wife and father made ouries at he War Office an( J were ;c m t!i,-i Teule had been shot for •54U i '.Term,an sentry. On the string! of thi- his w: s married again, an» ha a child now four years old. Xcthlug was wanted to make the con :u;on comp»ete but the return qi Teuie T -o i nafi village, which took place i few days since, . and he was of course received wife as one returned ran tne grave. He lad gone through thtret or of h;s ten vears’ confine a r:r uermaDv witnout arous D £suspicion as to his identity. ITEMS OF INTEREST. There are six thousand miles of tel¬ ephone and telegraphic wires in New Yoik city. The merchants of Springfield, 111 • > have made out a black list of persons who never pay. In Great Britain the weekly con¬ sumption of cotton is- 65,000 bales per week, and on the continent 52,000 of 400 pounds each. At the funeral of Price, the hanged Cincinnati negro murderer, it was i in tended to pass in the immediate friends and relatives of the deceased; but hundreds cf the vast concourse claimed relationship with the dead murderer. Even white women de dared that they were related to the dead man, and when told that they clared were not colored, they solemnly de¬ they were. Mrs. James Beard, of Rock Island, 111., got a divorce from her husband, not because she hated him particularly for his shiftlessnees, but she was tired of being the wife of a man whom she could not respect. Soon afterwards he went to her to find out whether she would take any legal proceedings against him if he married again. She not only gave her consent, but went to the wedding and gave the couple a present of $50. The opinion, quite generally taiued, that London is one of the few large British cities which grow is very erroneous, as the figures ly show. It is nearly eight years the last census, and the Registrar Gen¬ eral consequently supplies various timates, annually, of the population the principal towns, founded on ratio of increase between 1801 and 1871 in order to form a basis for calculation of yearly rates. From this it that London now contains increase since 1871 of 366,608. The wrath of Englishmen any act of injustice under the forms of law is easily excited; and this wrath has lately broken out in a very explo¬ sive way. A woman whose husband was in the House of Detention, felom iously and of malice aforethought carried to him concealed in a pie a quarter of an ounce of tobacco. For this offence, one Mr. Barstow, a magis -tcate, sentenced her to twenty-one days’ imprisonment at hard labor, but took off the hard labor when he found that she was in a delicate state of health. A young man ia Dubuque, Iowa, has become partially deranged over a mustache which refuses to sprout. He ed. was formerly He happy aud good-tern per is now morose, despondent and melancholy. One day he visited a prominent drug store and purchased all the different hair restorers to be had. After completing the rounds he carried the bottles to his room and put them aside for future use. When he the room his sister fourp i over a ! hundred bottles in bed tick, and all the were warranted to came hair to grow on the smoothest skin, The French have suppressed the name of God in their judicial oaths, and in their Freemasonn; lodges they have abolished the invocation *< the Architect. They are i.nt so much atheists as anti-Deists. They hate everything that reminds ttinm of the supremacy which the name of God so long held in the governance of the world. One day M. Littre met M Babinet, the savant, and, kn^ .ring latter’s vigorous atheism, aceo with the question : “Well, kW jet, there a God ?” ‘ No, 1 ' ansv.orcd flani net etoutly J ‘Well, von ant moi e re „f iou , tl * n j - re8po0 ^ , lt , a Loire or j k ow . r about it.' To English min( j 8 uI! i:il8 8eetQ g pro ,« but M. Littre, as a man who kn*w Dothiaboat the existent of » Go,I would oot Mn , e1 „ enllv pledge biBwW to any to. a, of toleran’t la.ib was a abone of the most type French Radicals ' A Case for Sympathy.—T he Sul. tan of Turkey is a slave to ■ .stout lie wear any article of dress clothed’ twice From fez to slippers he must, be anew a«ven times a week fie ho-, i* hearty commiseration, as h .s an. mt. who knows not the luxury ot a favorite suit of clothe?, which he has lear ,ed to love as an old friend, or the easy, vieid jog shoes, whose comforting embr ,(*> ■ the tender feet after a day 01 weary toil There is a luxury m om shoes iu which royalty itself has found! delight. The one it incident that we recollect t o t. ; -d 1 1, of Iv. ug, J a iues I., of La . I rd, was tiiat be W A ' wont to call for .is old sho^c L Poison. l t is an understood fact that Fever and its companion-, Intermittent and Remittent Fevers, are the"-- ’ G f p : ,j ? - n j yp, m j Ei} h, b n :. 1 ntiii "; 8 pnPt '• ‘ N '° m* i e, en - W 111 Si' , ! ‘ I i ’ ae blood, '■tu s . ney and Liver Cuv, u -ed in •II I ir* O L 1)11 Warner’s Safe Pills ' PRICE THREE CENTS. Business Cards* JAS. Hc&INLEY, CARPENTER YOllK STREET, second door east of Bull. furnished Jobbing promptly attended to. Estimates when desired. jeU-lim BEEF, VEAL AND LAMB. JOS. H. BAKER, J * BLTCEES, STALL No. 66, Sa vannah Market. A LL market other meats rates. in Orders their season promptly at lowest lllled and delivered. Will victual ships tlirouirhorit. Give,him a trial. oeJd-if ANDERSON STREET MARKET AND I CEE HOUSE, J. F. kinds PHILLIPS, of Meats, Butcher, Pish, Poultry and dealer and in Mar¬ al ket Produce. JtB' Families supplied at their residences, and and dispatch. all orders «-xecuted with anteed. promptness Satisfaction guar¬ ** ap6 dm C. A. CORTINQ, Hair Cutting, Hair Dressing, Curling and SHAVING SALOON. HOT AND COLD BATHS. der J 166l£ Planters' Bryan street, Hotel. c ,posit«< Spanish, the Italian, Market, tier un ma.n.and English spokon. unis ti W. B. FERRELL’S Agt. RESTAURANT, No. 11 New Market Basement, (Opposite Lippmaa’s Drug Store,) IanISM SAVANNAH. UA Plumbing and Gas Fitting* ciLAs* e. Wakefield^ Plumbing, Gas & Steam Fitting, No. 48 BARNARD STREET, one door north o .t south Broad treet. liklli Tuba. Winer Clouets, Hollers, Ranges, Jobolii!.- Prom;.itly aUemleo to. ebU Also, Agent Of "BACKUS WATER MOTOR McELimH & McFALI, PLUMBING AND OAK FITTING, Na.46 Whitaker street, corner York at. Lane N.K. Houses lilted with gas and water at short notice, Jobbing promptly attended to and all work guaranteed, at low prices. sepTll _ W. H. COSGRO VE, East side of Bull street, oue door from York, Practical Plumber and Gas Fitter JOBBING PROMPTtY ATTENDED TO. All work guaranteed to give satisfaction. Prices to suit the timeN. mli7tf Paints, Oils and Class* JOHN i BUTLER, Wholesale and Retail Dealer In WHITE LEADS COLORS, OILS, GLASS, VARNISH, ETC. Mill Ready Mixed Paint*, Railroad, .Steamer and Calcined supplies. Sole Agent for Georgia Lime L’lastor, Plaster, No. Drayton Cements, iluir and Land liC street, JantStf SAVANNAH, ga. ANDREW HANLEY, —Dealer in— lioots. Sties, Blinds, Mouldings Lima, Plaster, Ilalr and Cement, STEAMBOAT, j Railroad and Mill Supplies, paints, oils, varnishes, glass, &o. No. 6 Wliitakor & 171 Bay St., SA 1M ALVA//. UKORGly, »n yjh-t.f OLIVER. — Ilea lor la — rtf 4 ; | FAINTS, OILS, GLASS. Arc •9 DOOR3, HASHES, BLINDS, MOULDING Balustors, Plind Trijumiric::, ue No. 5. Will. 1 AKER ST., SA VAMNA 77. GEORGIA " r ltef t ~ Iw3* "ST JL JCjs TCP 3 ^ m •faywood, Gage A Co., W iloLESALi: IN IDI- 1 > ir AND uti.urff JiJ-ITAIL -s I I'lCfitf DEALERS ;n r-n abloi us t > oxwr t hi 1 Mr s vvil.li un ■ iir.il lelteu (lisp •Ii . tit >-V DR! HM >»av oiiiur »slnt.ll .itj; lit, M>: t'.s, I 'ruii ‘•It lilmiii l in refi i. .rs. In;iii fr>- t.l !<■ i-;:r ■ at fair lies. fh.i.'iklu! r ' t' rn'iHi we resi)*>f* illy HIGH It coutjuu, •f i. Il'J. Ollice No. ISS *iv s treet, el3t • V . .VI, GA. n <a j 7 \\T E c2!i?uSiJ£s* or: .f : ) I \ - Ill'll 111 ml 1 • I DA V > * t: J > t’LY <>• Tim rl- 1” L'UVr. to riUOLi e.i .< ad Vlsod ictt Si'ivo in.el J, ran IN DIE \ s c •»: ■ Li IJ - n aw jut'llou of rt cr. !o to lill all Mill ■ ■ :j J io 'Ition l ) rt - r,r K • R.VGE a on j Of niige la It. jul-U i Bay iVTitiI ce cti.v *A A i, HI street, 8av >.. all, Ga.