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D A I L Y A EVENESTG
Jl i'lM J Recorde
VOL IV.—No. 97.
THE SAVANNAH RECORDER
B. M. OBME, Editor.
PUBLISHED EVERY EVENING,
(Saturday Excepted,)
1161 BAY 8TRBET»
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49-We do not hold ourselves responsible for
the opinions expressed by Correspondents.
Ihe Recorder is registered at th
Post Office in Savannah as Second Class
Matter.
. Worse than Grant.
[From the New York Sun.]
The defeat of Gen. Grant and the
third term at Chicago was a good thing
for the Republican party, and a better
thing for the United States. His nomi¬
nation would have signified not only
the total moral rottenness of the party
aud the death of patriotism in its ranks,
but the open confession of the tact.
And yet this would not have been the
worst, for it is now conceded on all
hands, aod the friends of Garfield are
disposed to make the most of it, that
the return of Grant to power under all
the circumstances meant ths ultimate
subversion of the Constitution.
NoW, if Grant bad been beaten on
this ground, his opponents would have
been entitled tv great credit, and no
journal would have accorded it more
freely than the Sun. But which of the
Republican leoders put his opposition
Sherman, on this high principle? Did Did Blaine,
or Garfield ? anybody ?
Literally uone, except the unauthorized
r presentatives of the Scratchers and
the sa^oalled Republican League, who
were really not of the party, nor re¬
ceived into its counsels, but did merely
a voluntary These curbstone duty at the Con¬
vention. men, and these only
among all who can by any stretch ot
description be called Republicans, had
the courage of their opinions, and do
nouuced the true nature of the thirc
form ronsnir&rv
While Cameron Conklin* T o*an
and and tne the third-termers tnira termers generally, generally man man
fully declared forjGrant and a strong
government that is for overriding
the sacred traditions Constitution—the’anti- of the oast ami
changing tbird^term the
leaders paltered and hedg
ed ,nd not onn of Inem avowed hB
purpose to resist the revolution at the
polls, should tuey fail at tho Conven
uon. It is certain that every o ie of
them would have done his best to
elect Gr- d had he been nominated,
and perhaps to inaugurate him without
an election, as they did Hayes,
Their struggle against him was
merely a struggle for the spoils; while
apart from the principle involved in
the third term, their present candi
date ie not only no improv meut upon
Grant, but he stands upon a far lower
level as regards his personal character
and history, if uot. as regards hissur
roundings. Which of the old Rings
will Garfield fail to restore? Not the
Credit Mobilierists, for in utter and
eminent infamy he is himselt the chief
of them. Not the Washington Ring,
for, as Chairman of the Appropriations
Committee, he helped them to many
millions of the public mouey. Not the
Sanborn gang of moiety plunderers,
for he contrived tho law under which
they operated.
\Ve could extend this list iudefi
nitely. During the whole period of
venality and corruption, the period
Grant, of Colfax ‘tbi ot Ames of Shepherd
of Robeson, and’the period of the bribe
taker Christian statesman, grants'
the period ot subsidies, land
aud Credit Mobilier robbery, Gaifield
either quietly acquiesced iu the
schemes ot plunder eugiueered by bis
party associates, or lent au active hand
to help them aloug, aud eagerly pock
eted his share of the loot. Those who
rejected Grant for in corruption, Garfield. have a
sorry alternative
The cenaua givee the State of
ware a population of 145,000, the most
of the mci-eaee being iu the
most county of New Castle, in which
the oily of Wilmington is situated,
where the influence of railroads and
manufactures cau be most actively ex
erted,
Trial by Jury in Russia.
Trial by Jury in SPMtetersburg leads
to extraordinary results. Last autumn
doubt a postman was hundreds acquitted of who letters, had and no
stolen
the decision was endorsed by the news¬
papers, for no other reason than that
the prisoner had received but a smal 1
salary. Now we read of a post-office
official going scott free who had stolen
a letter containg 8200 roubles, and af¬
terwards, by forgeries, attempting to
conceal the robbery. On June 23d of
last year the prisoner, an “honorary
citizen appropriated the packet of
roubles. Two days after he quitted
his employment, and then devoted
himself to a life of pleasure, which was
cut short by his arrest, the embezzle¬
ment and forgeries having been discov¬
ered. A considerable portion of the
spoil was found upon him in the shape
of various public securities. On ap¬
pearing at the bar he urged the naive
excuse that he had “suddenly been
seized by an uncontrollable desire ‘to
live’ (as he said) if but for one day
only, and under the possession of this
impulse had quite unconsciously takeD
and made use of the 8,200 roubles.
Such mgeniousness, crowned by a pro¬
mise to do his best to restore the sums
spent, proving too much for the feel¬
ings of the jurymen, he was at once
acquitted. In Russia fraud is, unhap¬
pily, so frequent on a large scale, where
the criminals are men of importance,
that it is naturally judged inconve¬
nient to deal hardly with smaller of¬
fenders.
Fair Play, *
They have the Chinese question to
bother them in Me bourne, Australia,
and quite an excitement was caused
there lately in connection with the
cheap labor of the Mongcflian The
Lxecu ive Committee of the Exhibition,
which openB next October, being in
need of cane-bottomed chairs tor the
use of the expected visitors, advertised
for bids, and announced that no China
man need apply This was eminently
satisfactory to the Caucasian manofac
turers. Tney saw themselves relieved
of a troublesome competitor, and forth
with began to pat their heads together
with a view to secure their mutual ad
vantage by woiking together in bar
rnony. Unfortunately their calcula
lions miscarried, for when the com
mittee submitted its proposal to the
commission for endorsement, the anti
Chinese proviso was rejected by the
small but sufficient majority of one
vote. So the Chinese chairmakers have
been adartted to the bidding, and as
they are both expert and economical
workers, they stand a very good chance
of securing the contract. That is un
pleasant for*the other people, but that
the commission took the right course
is not open to question. The Chinaman
is entitled to fair play, though he does
wear a 9 ueue and eats his dmner with
chopsticks.
_________ m m*
Not a loou.-The New New York \ oik T> Tri *
<>une tells the story of a woman who
became a Second Adventist, and was
constantly expecting ‘winter the angel Gabriel,
One niglit in the enow was deap
and she heard the wood pile tumble
down. Thinking Gabriel had come
sure, she nudged her husband, saying :
“John, John! Wake up! Gabriels
coming! Don’t you hear his wheels?”
Her husband yawned and replied : “Go
to sleep, wife; go to sleep; Gabriel isn t
such a fool as to come on wheels such
good sleighing as this is I” This reminds
ns of a story of the late Judge Brock
enborough, of Virginia. He used to
wake up in the night and think he was
dyiug. One night, he awaked bis mat
ter-of-tact wife with “Mary, my dear,
I am going—I am sinking John, rapidly."
She yelled out, “Yes, that you
are ; I hear the bed-cords creaking.”
The cords were loose, and the Judge
lived many a day after that.
-— — m ^ --
Fool OllCC More ’
lor 4 ten wile .. ,
years my was
t to ber bed Wltb 8Ucb a complication of
advents that no doctor could tell what
WAS ma ^ ter or c ure hex - , and 1 used,
a smad lortnue iu humbug stuff.
BiX m0 n tb ftg ° Und f d
d .’^ 'V , i M Bitters on it, and I
tbou bt t 1 would be a fool once more,
j 1 tn n d jt . but Ved ^
wlsdom / ’ ^wo bottles cured *T, her, she is
’
n< ? w 43 aud as auy man s
'y ite * ftnd u C0 '” t m 5
buch lol,y P a J a r 1 ctroit
~• >
^ “
Most people will probably be rather
puzzled to know why the Italian gov
j eminent should prohibitive have thought duty it neces
^ucy to put a upon
| cottonseed oil imported from thej nit"
led States. The reason is simple, and
it is stated the duty will be en
; dorsed. This piarticular oil has been
sent to Italy mainlv for the purpose of
being doctored up m some and reshipped way, put in
appropriate bottles as
the oil of olives. A duty designed to
prevent that fraud is uot open to rea
‘sonable objection,
SAVANNAH, FRIDAY, JULY 23, 1880.
Judge Swayne on Garfield’s Bribe
Taking,
An Opinion of the United States Supreme Court
on the DeGolyer Case.
-
[From the New York Worid.]
A decision rendered in 1875 by Jus
tice Swayne of the United States Su
preme Court has been called into prom
inence by the fact that it settles the
question ot General Garfield’s position
in the DeGolyer matter beyond a doubt
aod exposes the weakness and absurdi
ty of the arguments employed by his
adherents in the vain hope of purify
iDg bis record upon the $5,000 fee
matter. The case in which this opin
ion of Justice Swayne was rendered
that of Chittenden against McClellan
and others. It was tried in Cook conn
ty, Illinois, in May, 1875, and was de
cided on appeal in October, 1879, in
th® United States Supreme Court. It
may be said that Justice Swayne is a
thorough Republican and an Ohio man.
The Supreme Court opinion was deliv
erod in the case of Burke against Child,
the case of Chittenden against McClel
lan being submitted on the arguments
and briefs filed in the former suit,
Justice Swayne says:
o The agreement with Gen. Gtr
field, a member of Congress, to pay
him $5)000 as a contingent fee for pro
curing a contract which was itself
made to depend upon only a future ap
propriation could come from a
committee of which he was chairman
—was a sale of official influence,which
principles no veil can cover, against policy. the plainest
of public No conn
sellor-a>law while holding high office
kaa a r jgbt [ 0 put himself in a position
0 £ temptation, and under pretence of
mak j n g a ] e „ a j ar p U ment exert his
0 gj c j a j influence upon public officers
<j e p eDC | e oi upon his future action. Cer
j a j n jy the courts of justice will never
i en( j themselves to enfjrce contracts ob
tained . guch influence ”
q; ke effecfc of tkis di 8C i 0£ | ure on the
men here who have endeavored in one
form or another to palliate Gen Gar ,
£eld . s ofenC8 be 0 „reetioated
•
___ m ^ m
TheSale Of French Crown Jewels- t
The Regent Diamond.
[From a Parte Letter.]
M. French Turquet, Minister the official selected bv
ihe ot Finance and
budget Freuch committee to arrange jewels the sale
of the crown has sub
ed his scheme for the sale of the
whole treasure. His plan embraces
three parts. The first will comprise the
historic jewels and stones, and will be
placed in the Louvre. The second part
will contain the seaice minerals and
w iH be placed in the Museum of the
Ecole dee Mines; while the third por
tion composed of royal and imperia’
jewelry, will be put up to auction and
sold to the highest bidder, the proceeds
to go to form a state fine art fund. M.
Turquet has had an inventory made of
this nrincelv treasure One of the most
famous of the l e diamonds is * a tbe one called
Hegeut. it weigna lobf carats, brillian- and is
one of extreme whiteness and
cy. This stone has a very curious Lis
tory attached to it. It was bongbt by
the Duke of Orleans, then regent of
I ranee, of Pitt, the governor oi Iort
St. Geoage, in the year 1717, for £135,
000.
When the rough stone weighed ill
carets, and the cutting cost £2,000.
Pitt had purchased this 9tone in Gol
conda, of Jamelchund, a Hindoo mer
chant, as he states in a pamphlet
published of to his clear haring himself stolen from This the
diamond, reports however, it.
was actually stolen
from the Garde Meuble in 1792, but
was restored in a mysterious
After this it was recut at a cost of;
£3,500, an operation which took two
years to perform. Napoleon I. was so
enamored of this gem that he had it:
set idea on of the the pummel size of of the his Regent sword. Some be |
may
given when it is stated that it is thirty i
carats larger than the Kon-inoor, the
weighing 106 1-16 carats.
Another remarkable object in
sa i e ; e a r0 und pearl, weighing over
twenty-seven carats, and valued at
and still another is a jeck
j ace 0 f pearls, styled cottier de la reinfic,
composed 996,700f. of twenty-five Next pearls,
worth comes a long,
clear ruby, weighing filtv-six carats,
an j vft i ue a a t oO.OOf. There is also
au ame thyst of more than thirteen
c a rata , va! oed at the large sum of
000f., and a sapphire of 132 carats,
worth 100 000*. By selling the jewels
of the third class M. Turquet expects
to realize ample funds for the purchase
of works of art wherewith to enrich
the national museums.
- ^ m ^ —
The chief of the Bureau of Statistics
reports that the total values oi the
exports of domestic breadstufis from
the United States during the month
of June, 1SSO, were $28,049,859, and
of June, 1879, $17,210,710. During
the twelve months ending Jure 30,
1880, $277,220,762, and durii the
same period in 1879, $201,77G,499.
The Pittsburg Kidnapping Case.
TLe Kidnapped Girl Found-She Identifies the
Tarty to the Crime-The Horrid Treatment
g^ e R ece ; ve( j
-
New York, July 22—A Pittsburg
special states that Salome Burkett, the
5 oun 8 ^ bo was kidnapped by four
men belonging to Boyd & Peters’ cir
^’ bas us been bhanksville, found, in Somerset county,
and S. C. Peters, A.
—'• Davis, H. Marks and Clark Wise,
the men charged with the crime, yes
^ r d a y “ a hearing before Judge
Hunton, . Greensburg. Miss Burkett
m
waa oa the stand and testified to
the outrageous treatment she had re¬
ceived, fully identifying the prisoners
aa a P ai ’t °1 the circus gang that had
maltreated her. She is in a very de
plorable condition. The case will be
ferreted out t 0 bottom. Miss Bur
kett ia a little country girl, only four¬
teen y ea r s of age. The most intense
indignation . prevails in Greensburg,and
threats of lynching the offenders are
freely made.
Pittsburg, Pa., July 22.—The
proprietors and about 50 of the attach"
ea Boyd and Peters’ circus have
been arrested for the abduction of and
outrage upon Miss Salome Burkett, of
Somerset county,
Upon the preliminary examination
Miss Burkett testified that in leaving
the circus she was separated in the
crowd trorn the friends who accom
of P an circus j e d her, employes and forced the away ticket by a gang
to wagon,
where under threat of ins! ;nt death,
sbe was afterward outraged by the
whole party of a doze i or more. She
was then taken in a wagon to Turner’s
cross roads and released. In attempt
t° make her way here from there
sba was caught by four more showmen
aD( l again outraged, after which she
remembered nothing more until she
was found near Some'set on Monday
morning.
The girl is now partially demented,
Intense excitement prevails in Somer
«»t and Greensburg.
oiW r nm
well. .. apprenticed to a grocer,
Franklin was the sonfof a tallow chand
|er> ^bitfield waa the son of an inn
keeper. Shakespeare the son of a
wood stapler; Milton of a money scriv
eQer - Burn8 ™ a plowman Cincin
na [file tus dmtatorship Pawing of Rome m the field offered when
was
him. Elihu Bushet, the learned, , was a
blacksmith, and attained his learning
™ bde wor bi n g at the forge, Daniel
^ ^ a ebster A- was °“ c tb f e worked null boy on of a the farm, slashes. Henry
and Napoleon , was of an obscure fam
L- t young men therefore, who
starfc lu h:e writedown the names of a
dozen or so of our richest men, and
after summing up their history, they
Wl11 eoon fin<i that Astors, Vander
hilts. Browns and Stewarts, accumu
\* b > r ie ? their ho /of^nes d °f/ork by hard with labor, their own and
bands. \ anderbiltstarted in life with
fifty dollars, Girard was a cabin boy,
and Bob Johnson, Hugh ° V Miller, Allen
Cunningham, Gibbons, Dr. Livingston, T • •
^* muel B'ew and other men whose
“‘““J'** ble mechanics.^
_ ___
Teref. Giant Telescopes. —Three
p ro j ec ts are at present on foot which
severally promise to increase the range
of 0 ur telescopic survey of space. The
f irs t j s the American scheme for erect
in g aD observatory somewhere in the
Rocky Mountains, and planting there,
above the denser and more dis
tui >ed strata of the atmosphere, the
mogt powerful telescope that can be
ma j e _ The second project for an in
crea8e 0 f telescopic range is of British (
nvention, and involves the construe
t ; on 0 f a 4_f 00 t mirror, not of metal
like t h e 4-foot mirror constructed by
Lassell, and the yet mightier mirror ol
tke great p t0age telescope of Parson
town> but of silvered glass ; and it is
believed that the light gathering pow—
er 0 f guck a mirror would be greater 1
tkan t h at of the Rosse telescope, while
0 f coarse it would be far more man- t
ea ble. i
--- -m ^ m- -- :
A fortnight ago the Paris police
found the body oi a man of color m
the Seine. There was a tin case in his
It was opened by the police
and found to contain documents setting
forth that the deceased was the son
a chief who had revolted against the
King of Abyss in a. His father wta
during the revolution, and he
himself, together with his brother, were
taken prisoner.-; but, thanks to the heip
of a woman, they succeeded in escap
ing H:s brother, however, was at
tacked and killed by an enormous snake
in the forest. He himseif, after six
weeks’ tramping through fie t d and
flood, at length reached the Egyptian
outposts. He was then conveyed
Cairo, where the Khedive gave him
some money with which he came to
Paris. His autobiography ends
“I thought I should be able to live in
P*ri^ but here, m elsewhere, one must
be useful, and I knew nothing: so I
preferred death to starvation.”
Ghosts.
Ghosts can now ride a high horse.
The , have , beeD recognized . , , by judge . ,
y a
in open court, if not as actual facts,
least as affording motives which justi¬
fy wfiat would otherwise be a crime in
the eyes of the law, and that is strong
enough recognition to suit the most
fastidious ghost for the rest of the cen¬
tury. It was in Newburyport, imbibed Mass.
Some young men who had
too much liquid Democratic patriotism
on the Fourth, and determined not to
go home till the morning of the 5th,
didn’t go straight home even then, but
conspired to throw a stone into the
chamber-window of a venerable citi¬
zen. Their little arrangement was
overheard by some one, who told the
old man all about it just in time. He
jumped out of bed in his night clothes
and ran down stairs without put! ing
on anything else. There he hid be¬
hind the lront door and when the
Fourth of July party came along he
rushed out upon them. They weie
scared bad'y and all ran but one, a
youth named Isaac Hibbs. He stood
his ground and knocked his assailant
down twice. He was arrested lor as¬
sault and battery, was held for trial,
and when his case came up in court be
pleaded that “he thought it was a
ghost, and wasn’t going to run from
it.” The judge ruled that, if the
young man thought it was “a ghost,”
and was struck with that idea, he
committed no assault, and, consequent¬
ly, should be discharged.
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
Alkali washes are a valuable remedy
for ivy poisoning.
The census of New Jersey is not yet
completed, interesting bnt enough is known The total to
show some facts.
increase in the population of the State
since 1870 will be nearly 200,(jOO.
The fooling up of the census of 1S80
here gives the following results: Popu¬
lation of \Vha8hington 148,404, in¬
crease since 1870, 39,205; Georgetown
12,707, increase since 1870, 1,323;
county 16,690, increase since 1870,
5,573—total 177,801, increase since
1870, 46,101, or nearly 33 per cen¬
tum.
Drawing . the color line eometimes
other A P^rs
h ' for fnd
, burg, crammed full of col red men m«n a
women, dressed in their best and look
in £ eiI j ® /fflavn !
who wanted to save'money monpv and and takp take a
rl P K , L
, ‘J® 1 “J? and i"i , b f
P 8 0 T w b
^ white ,‘A loiks r ip is • aiiowoi n i on au j: g
rain,sa .
Queer notions they are that sr me
folks fair maiden have of postal in Gteen cards. 1 here Ohio, is a
corn v,
who has been wondering tor six weeks
why she doesnt hear from her beau
m Delaware. His missive is detained
in the Baltimore Post Office as a coun
terfeit postal 1 card. The expression r oi
, his love , bad , been wn ten on a piece oi ,
white bristol card board, cut in be
^ stamp stuck directly in the middle id e
° After !r wha, . . has , happened, , there is
®°t much i e tcooi t Mt tu, ptopoae
monument to the_ late Louis Napoleon
ever 1 1J
t 7 ba f U^an btanley, q 13 i^ re who L" e '. has 11 1 HbsoJme
“thoritj tbe m the premists, has.Pad has atied little
hea rt in ocxairsesa an*,
nd , the pressure of court inii ieuce.
“ ' ,r
tbe be ^ Q tor ‘
many censured by tne u Uou-e ot Gotn
mona 6 ™ 1 8C ^T Ct ' AU Y 8 1 f ,s
>
^eof to carry the .l lt Bona.riartes n Ut " 10 P ut a 8 VVestmuister * tul * 01 any
m
Abbe y would be iltue ies3 tllau P ro,a *
natl0n -
Tb e hanging of the three boy mur
derera at Conton, Ohio, had -otne no\ei
incidental points. The oldest wa-. un*
der l 8 - The crowd on the previous
ni S ht was enormous, and would have
been larger, but for a political meeting
and a circus, both of which W'fVu 1
within hearing of the prisoners U.M
0 f the trio made a desperate effort to
escape in the confusion; another fell in
a fit while imploring his companions to
ma ke a confession exculpating him ;
and the third cooily discussed with a
Roman Catholic and a Protestant
Episcopal clergyman the merits of the
religions which they
finally telling them that he had no
faith in either. A laugh.er o. the
Judge who had passed the death sen
tence gave each murderer a good-bye
kiss,
Poison.
It is %o understood Uot thn< Y
_
and ite companions,
and Remitter t l evers, an
of poisoned Lmod, made impure
an mooted atmosphere. 'Ao
medicine purify the in blond, exi-teu Warner*iiafe e will^ sxqui.kly Kid
a*
ney andLivei Bure, used in conneotioo
with Warner’s Safe Puis,
PRICE THREE CENTS.
Business Cnrds*
JAS. McRINLEY,
C AEPENTEE,
YORK STREET, second door east of Bull.
furnished Jobbing promptly attended to. Esiimates
when desired. jel !-6m
REEF, VEAL AND LAMB.
JOS. H. BAKER,
BITTOHEH,
STALL No. 06, Savannah Market.
A LL market other meats rates. in Orders their season promptly at lowest filled
and delivered. Will victual ships throughout.
Give him a trial. ociil-tf
ANDERSON STREET MARKET
AND ICE HOUSE,
J. F. FHILLIPS, iUxtcher, and dealer in al
kinds of Meats, Fish, Poultry and Mar¬
ket Produce. Xir Families supplied at their
residences, and dispatch. ail orders executed with
promptness and Satisfaction guar
an lead. ap6 6m
C. A. CORTJ.NO,
Hair Cuttine, Bair Ms?, Mu and
SHAVING SALOON.
HOT AND COLD BATHS.
I 66 I 4 Bryan street, cbposite the Market, un
der Planters’ ami English Hotel. spoken. 'Spanish, Italian, selH-tf Ger
man.
W. B. FERRELL’S Agt.
RESTAURANT,
No. 11 New Market Basement,
(Opposite Lippman’s Drug Store,)
SAVANNAH. GA
Plumbing and Gas Fitting*
~ ~
C11AS. E. WAKEFIELD,
Plumbing, Gas & Steam Fitting,
No. 48 BARNARD STREET, one door north
oi South Broad treet.
Bath Tubs, Water Closets, Boilers, Ranges,
JobDing Promv'tly attended to.
ebll Also, Agent of “BACKUS WATER MOTOR
McELUNN & Me FALL,
PLUMBING AND GAS FITTING.
Na. 16 Whitaker street, corner York st. Lane
N.B. Houses fitted with gas and water at
short notice, Jobbing promptly attended to "
and all work guaranteed, at low priMM. * , >
__aepVti
W. H. COSGROVE,
East side of Bull street, one door from York,
Practical Plumber and Gas Fitter
JOBBING PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO,
All work guaranteed to give satisfaction.
Prices to suit the times. mU7tf
Paints, Oils and Gla Slid*
JOHN ii. BUTLER,
Wholesale and Retail Dealer In
WHITE LEADS COLORS, OILS, GLASS,
VARNISH, ETC.
Ready Mixed Paints, Railroad, Steamer and
Caicined Mill Supplies. Plaster, Sole Agent for Hair Georgia and Lime
Cements, Laud
Piaster. No. 22 Drayton street,
JanlGtf SAVANNAH. GA.
ANDREW HANLEY,
—Dealer iu—
Dorns, Sallies, Blinds, Mouldings
Lime, Plaster, Hair and Cemont,
STEAMBOAT,
Railroad and Mill Supplies,
paints, oils, varnishes, glass, &o.
No. 6 Whitaker & 171 Bay St.,
SA VANN A If, QKORQly
in y 26 - 1 . f
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— Dealer In —
Steamboat, Rail Road and Mill Supplier,
PAINTS, OU.S, Cil,ASS, tef, •»
DOORS, SASHES, BLINDS, MOULDING
Balusters, Blind Trimmings,
No. 5. WUl A AKER ST..
VANN All, GEORGIA
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