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PRISON HELLS In Which Captured Confederate Soldiers Were Confined DURING CAPTIVITY. Thc Pei sonni Recollection of An Old Confederate Soldier, Who Spent Some Timo in tho Prison Wrns of thc North During the War, Published in Reply to Cor poral Tanner's Tirade. To tho Editor of The Nows and Courier: I have road with feollngs of i disgust the article headed "Union j Veterana Indignant," in Tho Sunda* News of tlio 2G Inst. Corel. Tanner said: "When tho ac cursed soul of Capt. Wlrz (loafed Into tho corridors of heil tho devil recog nized that his only possible compel? tor was there." This may bo ac counted for by tho fact that Capt. A Walker, provost marshal of tho pris on cami at Hart's Island, N. Y., was still living. I can well remember, as n boy sill! in my teens, my arrival, at this pen In tho month of March, lX'.ir,, after spending a (boo at Pollock Street Jail at Now Horn, N. C. ll was tl fearfully cold, windy day, and when we reached tho sheds, occupying throo Bides of a square and sur rounded by tho waters of Long Is land, we wore delighted to find Inigo heating stoves known as sell-feeders allowing one lo each hundred men. and beside tho door a ton of hard coal. Imagine our disappointment whoa, alter a night of comfort, tho next morning tho quartermastei carno and toro down every stovo and removed every lump of coal. This was bul the beginning, for Iii a few days wo were ordorod to fall In with all of our effects, then place them before us upon the ground What then? A non-commissioned oincer started, and every kcopsalu or any art lido of value, even to ;. pocket knife was stole*!. This wa? tho order of the commandant, A Walker, not Major Wins. Every Indignity was studied out thal they might he heaped upon ns Push carls with pick and shovel wert provided, and tho mon work od ns convicts clearing stono from parade ground. All ol' this was dom' with the plenty to eat referred to by Corpl Tanner. 1 well remember nt day break ono morning after being up all night, with my friend, Alick Do Chelsey, Marlon Arl il lory, going to tho well In the muidlo of parado ground for a drink of water, an old soldier, I forget his name, was a few stops In front of mo, Wllliout a word of warning wo wore tired upon and tho old soldier fell dead. When 1 reached tue barracks and offered the water to my friend, Alick, I found him dead. Also, we had a hos pital, but our poOr fellows wer? al lowed to romain in their bunks un til they wore so weak that many died In being carried lo it. Corpl. Tanner says we gave them plenty lo eat. Ile certainly must bc; an ascetic. For bis informal ion, our bill of faro W?S, one-half loaf Of baker's bread and six ounces of salt beef lu the morning. At. twelve o'clock pea soup, sometimes English split peas I will give tho prescription: Take a drinking tumbler of warm waler, add three teaspoonfuls of pul vorlzod sulphur and stir lt well; you have tho soup. Tho bill of furo was sometimes changed, and we received four hard tack and a small piece of boiled beef, and at twelve o'clock Heston bean soup, they lold us. bul If you took a piece of ga USC and st rained il yon could not lind tho skin of a bea tl le a gallon. This is tho plenty thal we wore required lo live upon, except on one occasion when au army wagon load of green mut (op was li a ii 1 oil in which If eaten, would Ita Vi finished a few thousands of oar bravo h.:,v:?, but our lie?d doctor, who. by ile- why, wis ai Pori Moultrie bef??o the var. and was a friend ol' IliO Key V I.il ford Smith, sent ll out and we han no meat. Compare Wir/, willi Walker. Why. if the devil knew Walker was coining ho would have evacuated hell be foi' ' ho caine in sight. Major Wlrz lot tb. N'orlhern prisoners' Ipi'vc their l>o\o. sent by friend ;. None evi r entered our pl'isnh without heilig rilled Ol robbed, and lew even then. I know th 14 from the fad Illili 1 was at tile provost marshal's ( dice as a clerk With my friend. J?tiSO Colton Lynes, nnd saw it alinosl daily. Well, I think w e (efl hi ar ?100 dead l here In thl'Ci months. I, lil least, was. liol in i he emaciated condition referred to by Corpl. nil HOI', for I weis,bed I \ ? pounds, and w hen I reached homo I weighed only Oft. So nundi food did liol agree willi mb. Mr Sherman, no doubt, In lils mandi and pillage, found stifllclont food from the Simple fact that be robbed women and children and left them t? .'larve. If the one hundred and odd thous and Ghtnclntcd Confed?rale soldiers thal were so well fed In Northern prisons had been released he never WOltid have disgraced this country by snell fl ma rc!', and tho noble wo men 61 ihe Confederacy could have placed any inscription on I hoff mon li men ts without giving offence to the Grand Army of the Republic. Children unborn during tho wari PROHIBITION KILLED The House Refuses to Pass the Nash Prohibition Bill \V. C. T. U. Delegado? Appears lu Gallery Prepared to AKHMHII UH? Legation With Hymns. The Nash hill to pr?vido for State prohibition waa killed bj the House Thursday, tho voto bel?g nearly two to ooo During tho progress of debate on the bill a delegation of w. C. T. U. members appeared in tho gallery and took seats Thoy had opon hymn hooks In tholr hands and it was evi dent that they were prepared to sing hymns at the psychological moment, rho attention of Mr Nash was called to their prosoaco, and at his roquent tho Rev. A. N. Brimson, of tho Main street, M. E. Church, of Columbia, went to tho gallery and suggested that lt would he helter not to m uko any demonstration Meanwhile Speaker Whaley had in structed tho sergeant-at-nrtns to strictly enforce the rules and sup press any demonstration at once. The ladies, however, acceded to the suggestion of the prohibitionists on tho lloor and there was no expres sion whatever The vote on tho motion to strike out tho enacting words waa as fid lows, tho ayes helng opposed to tho Nash prohibition hill and tho nays lu favor of it: Ayes Speaker Whaley ?nd tho following repr?sentai Ives: Ayer, Hal? tontine, Hanks, Beattie. Boyd, Brant ley, A Q Brice, F M Bryan, Cannon, Carson, Carwile, Cosgrove, Cot bran, Cox, Croft, Culler, DoVore, Dick, Dixon, Dour, Dowling, Fraser, Frost, Cary, Glasscock, Gyles, Hall, Harley, Karman, Harris, Harrison, Hughes, ll yd rick, Kellahail, Lawson, 1.?gare, McMaster, Miley, Miller. Nichols, cdckolsoil, Richardson. Hacker, Saw yer, Saye, Sellers, Shlpp, Slaughter, K. l\ Smith, splvey, Sltllinell, Stubbs, Thomas, Todd, Von Kol ll lt/ Yan (lerhorst, Wade, Wallace, Wiggins 02 Nays -Arnold, Bailey, T. S Brice, W. I). Bryan, Carrigan, Clary, Clllllt scalos, Courtney, Dei-ham. Dingle, J, I!. Dodd, Douglass, l-'pps. (lause, J. l\ Gibson. Goodwin, Greer, Hardin, Hinton, Johnstone, .Iones, Kershaw, Klrven. Lane, Lester, Lolllicr, Mc Coll, McKeown, Mann, Morrell, Nash, Nesbitt, Ni vcr, Norton, Barker. Rat torsoa, Roave8, Richards, Robinson, Scarborough, Scruggs. Sharpe, D. L. Smith, J. IO. Smith, Veiner, Wanna maker, Wlmherly, Woods, Wyche, Ycldell.51. The following pairs were announc ed: Both tl 1110 nay Carri.; aye; Gibson aye, Tatum nay: Major nay, Yotl llians ye; Aull liny, Tompkins aye. Tho clincher waa then pul ou tho motion to kill. t ii i : i i > i OR TRI \L. The Alleged Safe Cracksmen Given a I'l'cliniinary Hearing. J. T. Leonard. C. Frank Shaw. .las. Scanlan, Charley Williams and Henry s. Halloa, the alleged safe crackers who have hoon hi Jail at Lancaster ince tho arrest at Van VVyck, a month ago, were given a preliminary hearing before (Jilltod state-. Com missioner Lani Moore Thursday. The charge was robbery of the [lostolllco tit I Minn, N. C., on Dec. 28, 1907. The examination was conducted by l'uiied Stales Post?nico hisp? dorn Gregory, Bulla and Mosby. A l?rgO ii a m ber of witnesses la uii'I near Dunn and Sm it 1? liol ii. N. C., were Iii attendance at the hearing, rim witnesses for the gOvorntuoiil were all cross examined by the ac cused, the (|nest lons being main-, asked by Setiiilaa, who never totik his right hand from his inti ut ll lo keep a snap shed picture from bein; taken ol' Ililli; The evidence against them was that when shortly after Hie robbery at Dunn Hoy had in I heir posessiou dynamite caps, I use, soap and oilier arl iel es used in crack lng safes. ll was also found that (hey were di seCll in and near Dunn a ShoH lillie before Hie robbery. At tho con clusion of tho hearing the commis sioner announced thai lie would send lilli <.:.;<? up lo tho Uti i t0(? State.-; Court for Chi). Court for trial. t RANCHI) WITH .(ACKSON. Dies at the Agc of One Hundred am] Tw cul y. At Bib lol. Va., Mis. Mary Ru 111 K0> Wood, a nai ive ol Fas) Tennessee died Monday at the tige of I 20 years In her youth M rs. Wood sa w Georgi i Washington, Thomas .jefferson at?<! others of I ho early statesmen, n i; said her best recollection of public tuon w as (hal of And t ow J?chsen : wini w hom she frequently danced when a ghi. The sit res I way to Impoveiisi, your henri lo hoad Up your love. The man w ho is SQ wi. 0 that lu never laughs ls the greatest fool ol ; all. are men now. Let us speak tho tl'Uth. Re; peel fully, c. F. Stolnmoyer, 106 fleaufaln street, Charleston, January 27. "The Beer King" Has Not Been Arrested, Yet But WARRANT IS ISSUED For His Arrest, HIUI IIHB Been Out Two Weeks.-I UH Present Where abouts IN I'liknowu, Hut Hin At torney Scoffs Mt the Suggestion That Furnuin is u Fugitive From Justice. Whore is J S Farnum? Ia he a fugitivo from Justice? Or is he out on a business trip? Is ho a man of such unbusinesslike methods that his employers do not know where ho is? Is he aware that tho dispensary commission has had Issued a warrant charging him with conspiracy? Has ho soon no South Carolina newspapers In the last few weeks, has ho received no statement from his j wife,, no notification from Ibo An-' houser Busch Brewing company? If in- did know of the existence ofi tho warrant, then has ho not treated tho commission with contempt in ovading service of tho warrant ? These are the questions propounded hypothetically In tho mooting of tho' dispensary commission on Thursday morning says Tho State. It was published In newspapers cir culating as widely as F. S. Furnuin | ls known that tho warrant was is sued for him on the 16th day of | January, and tho ofllcors of tho law know not his whereabouts. When the commission Thursday resumed its Investigations, the caso of (ho Anheuser-r.useh Browing as sociation was Hist on the docket. lt had boen slated that there would bo a bookkeeper from that concern who would produce books of record. Ho was not in evidence at 10 o'clock. At IO:Jil) tho commission was formally convened. Throe limes tho marshall, In reg ular court fashion, cried Hie name of tho defendant. Ko response. Three tin es tho name of .1. S. Fnr niim was called No responce. lt was reported thal a lawyer, the same who had represented NV. 1). Hoy, ind others at a former mooting, bad communicated with tho Anheuser Busch association, to inquire if they wished to bo present to establish tho validity of their ?daim. This attor ney had not boon advised to proceed with tho case. With something of mock distress lu bis tones. Col. T. ll. Felder ad dressed t be c Immission : ".Mr. Chairman and Gentlemen: We were hopeful, though not san guine, fiat Mr. Farnum would be present on this occasion. lint he ls not. However, I will assume the bur den of proof ia this case and will establish by documentary evidence that the plaintiff has no just claim against the state." Continuing, Col. Felder sail that ho wished to go just far enoch Into tho matter to show that this "Bud weiser claim" ns ho referred to it "ls reeking With filth and fraud and ls ono of the basest conspiracies on ro eoi'd In all Hie annuals of this coun try." "Under tho laws of South Caro lina," ho added, this cominis! lon is lis much of rt judicial tribunal as the supremo court Itself. This commis sion is vested with the right to serve writs and to compel attendance, if the parties who aie notified by regis tered mall that the claims are to he examined fail lo present their books, I Mien this court may proceed against them as it sees lit." In concluding his opening remarks Mr. Felder said that after consulta (ion willi the attorney general he might ask tho commission to take this action. "Call a case in its order on tho docket and when the plaintiffs are in default by not being present and win n lhere is prima lari" evi dence of guilt as to g rh fi und brib ery, then thc attorneys would retord a request that judgment bo entered oil behalf of tho State. I There being no answer when tlc Innnies of the plaintiff's wore called, Mr. Folder pul In evidence a card i WlliCh lui staled was the legal ac knowledgement of the Anions Busch Brewing Association thal tbo> had receiveil the registered lcd (Or m I which the claimants were notiiied io i lie here al lids time with ce t ipi books ol' record and ol' expenses lo ?show thal their claims wore ju. ; and Valid' This UOt I licii I lon iud only liti .Ithori/eil and directed and Invited . tho A n hotot? r- B r cw I n g association lion to produce the books, but also ' ordered them lo produce J, S. Far ' Ullin as their ngClll. lOxCOpl for Hie ; card indicating tin' receipt of thc . loller from the South Cand?na cont* ' mission. HICK? was no acknowledge ment or oilier statement from tho st. Louis brewers. John I!. Cur, deputy sheriff, who was sent to Charleston willi tho war* ' rant thou testified that tho paper had been placed in Iiis hands at I ? p. m by Sheriff Coleman and that he had ? in ken the trnln nt 2.1 ti a. hi. for (marleston, that being tho most noto rious place ?d' abode and of basilio! of tho said Furnuin. A visit wa made to tho abode of J. S. Farnum j al the Charleston hotel. Fm mun THE APPELT BILL To Impose a Tax of $5,000 on U.juoi Drummers, I'ttMCw. Ch? .Senate foy m Thargo Ma jority-It Will Kxclude Whis key DraniuiorK From the State. At the night session of the senate Thursday Mr. Appelt's hill providing for a license tax upon liquor drum iners paused a. third rending and waa orderod ao?t to the houHe, but not until lt was anionded by providing that the tax shall bo $5,000 instead of $1,000 aa proposed in tho original hill. j Tlie 1)111 was taken up under the head of special orders shortly after tlio night session was convened. He Tore thero was any debate. Senator Graydon moved to strike out tho en acting words, tho vote on that motion being as follows: Yeas Ito kill tho bill)-Rnss, IMac!:, Clifton. Karie, Hough, Laney, Haysor, Stackhouso and Williams. .Nays (for tho bill)-Appelt, idease Brice, Brooks, Carlisle, ('ar penter, Crouch, Gibson, Griilln, Har din, Harvey, Ilolliday, Johnson, Mnuldln, McGowan, McKolthan, Otts, Hinkler. Smith. Sullivan, Talbert, Toole, Townsend Mr. Hogers wanted no $1,000 11 ceuso issued in any prohibition coun ty Ile did not want, to license drum mers because they may ho debarred by federal legislation. Mr. Appelt fought this and wanted his hill kept Intact. Senator Crouch was strenuous in lils support, of tho bill and fuvorcd a $5,000 llceuao. Mr. Carlisle said the courts have held that a license fee will stand tho tests of tho courts and ho fav ored tho hill. Mr Rogers' amnndment to prohibit licenses In prohlbillo.n counties was killed Mr. Courch lind the license fixed at $5,000 per county for soliciting liquor orders, which ls deemed ab solutely prohibitive. Mr. Rogers was persistent and wanted Marlboro county excluded from tho. bill No license to sell li quor has ever been Issued In thai county for 50 years, and he seriously opposed uny and every license sys tem i Mr. Brice said a drummer could i now solicit liquor orders la drV counties and ns he saw lt tho prop osition was simply to collect a li cense from outside drummer* wie* now solicit orders without paying a cent and ho felt the $5,000 Ucease would keep drummers out of the dr j' counties Dr, Black was opposed to any roi' ' of license; he was not hi favo,- ol these drummers coming here at all He felt that thia license would give tho semblance of authority to solic it business. Ile wanted them barred from tho State. ? Mr Rogers' amendment exempting Marlboro county from tho provision! of tho hill was adopted by a vote of liO to tl. The bill was amen li I ro as not to apply lo Lancaster ns well. Mr. Raysor offered an amendment to make lt a criminal offense io viii . it orders. That he urged would avoid tho objections as lo a license system. Mr Otts thought this would not stand the tests of the coures. The Raysor amendment was kl!:cd. Tho hill was finally ordere I tei.t to the house providing for a $5,i ?0 license for drummers soliciting li quor orders for Interstate shipment This license ls applicable In each county in which such Inters! ie ship ment may he solicited. Senator Ai ladt thinks his bill will do ni ich to kill the promiscuous soliciting ot li quor orders, which ho dcciuroJ had hoco nie a nuisance In his soo ton. t Nothing makes wrong men seem innocent more quickly than lo ac quire an interest in lt was not there. A second visit and search of tho premises was made. Again no Fa rh a ni. The hitler's wlfo slated thai Farn um was away on a business trip. Mr. T. Moultrie Morde-al, attorney for .1. S. Pu I'll tl ll), called the Stale oil the long distance 'phone Thursday hight ?uni slated thal he had heard in Asheville the allegation that. Fa i' ll hin is a fugitive from justice. 'Tho Charge ls ridiculous,' said Mr. Mol lie;.i, 'The fad is that Familia is on one of his regular business trips and .ci his rellim lo Cha rle;.I on will :ur I render and give bond, abd 1 so staled ?io Hie attorney general, Mr. I ?yo tn "Any chai go that Fa ni ll til has closed out Hie gre,lier part of bi ni I noss in Ci lc: lon and In com pany with lils family, has left the '.(ale is absurd and I wish to deny il " $15 DOLLA RS SA V LD TO ORGAN crsioMKiis For Next io Days. Wo will sell our excellent $so Or -ans al only $<i.">. (Mir $'J0 Organ* Tor nly $75. Special Terms: One .hi d now, one-third Nov. l'.HtX, bal on . Nov. i OOO. if Interested, elli .his ad. and enclose lt with your let .er. asking for catalog and price llsl If you want the best organ on earth lon'! delny, but w rite us nt once and save $15 and make nome harmon! ons. Address: MA LOX IO'S Ml SK IIOCSK, Columbia, S. C. Pianos ann Organs. Hight Stores Burn. Fire yesterday morning swept Piro early Wednesday morning swept tlie village of Girard, Ga., consuming eight stores, tho hotel and several robideneos. Dr. P. G. Brigham, one of the most prominent physicians, ruBhed into a residonce to eave his medicine case. He wu? caught under the falling roof and burned to death. Thirty-Two Cent Cotton, rou SALK-Wat Hon's eolobratodl Improved "Butninor Snow" upland lonjcl ?tapio cotton need. Makes bale ana moro por acre ordinary land under fuirl condition?; sell? for 17M to 32 cents por, plckod. Ginned dry pound. Kitvlly on ordinary ?aw l % I nelie?. Pr I gio, staples Ita to oq: T buiihol, IS.OPt S buahols, $4.00; 6 bushels tout over at $1.00 por bushel. W. W. Watson, Pro >rlntor, fhuaiaorlana Warm, Bateaburg* How to Cure Rhemnattoni. Tho otuuie o Ktieutnalis ?JKI kindred dta 0W5O3 Lan excess ot ario acid ia tb? bloodt To euro thin torrible d ?OAS tho ?sid saust bo expelled Hud iii? ?yatom nj regulated that nomme ncid will IM> formed in exotvaive qom, tTTivn.i Rheumatism in un internal divwse and requin HM intern d remedy. Kubbine with 0 t , H>o o ir?, affords only t causon j ou to de hy* tho proper treatment,au i ..,,.?< s she mrri ndy to get a Armer hold < n you. Linimente muy enuc Vo pasin, but they will no nore cn'? 1 thoma! ism than pidut will cliango the libra o I 11 cu i od. .'.'S Science bna at lunt discovered ? pot fool nd completo euro, which in cdlcdJR'miuna ..i de. 'IVs < d in himdretlfl of case*, it ha i ef coo d tho m Bl mn colons cu rot-; we li li, vc il wi'l cure y ll, Rhett mao'd' "(,'ntn at tho .inls I ri m tho inside," ?sw'<?pn the poisons ut of the '-yst' in !.,n"s up tin ft 'in ?ch, r-g i iti. n tho liv-r ?cd kldni'VH mid ina'os you ?til allover. Rheum'dd ''strikes th? rom ? . the di-OHM.' und r OHIO Vert its ca11SO." T is plend d r DM'dy ih BO!I| bv ?I 'PRlsta and o dors general ly nt r>0>, mid $1 a I?'tile, lu ubini lorni ai 25o. mci 50<\ A package. C'ot. li nie lo(ln\;de'n HU 6danger UH. . " ?\ ..J LET US SHOW YOU HOW TO ?KT TUB BUST MAGAZINES FOR TH* LEAST MON HT. SOME GOOD OFFER?: Success Magazine .. ..fl.96 Woman's Home Comp... 1.0# Our Price for Both.$1.68 ^ Dressmaking at Home . . $0.50 National Home Journal. .50 Mother's Magazine.St Our price for all.81.. I Pictorial \*<*y*?ym ..$1.00 Succoss Magazine . . . . 1.00 Cosmopolitan.1.00 Our Price for all.$2.3?y Rend for our Catalogue which give* lowest rates on nil Magazines. ORANGEBURG SUBSCRIPTION AGENCY. P. O. Box ?4. Orangeburg, 8. O. SIMS' BOOK STORE, ORANGEBURG, So. Co. Buy a Shingle Mill. ? -V-.*;SL Tlie lowest priced power feed Hhinglc mill on the mai t?"* Vv .'/ '"' '<&n? kel; enpncilv ri,U0;> to lfi.wi KlniijdcR p, rdny,4 lo loll c. Tlie lowest priced power fo;'d Fhinglc mill on the mar ket ; cu pad tv 8,ooa to 16,000shingles p? r day,4 to lo ll c.; vrulght OfiO lb?. Carriage hat! nulomatln return motion. "BEST GOODS -BEST PRICES" Write UH for close price quotations. OOLUMniA SUPPLY CO. - . COLUMBIA, S. 0. S? mamammm I have lind several years experience In growing CflbbitRC plants and nil. other kinds of vegetable plant? for tho (ride, vii: licet plants, Onion plants, Coll-ird plants, timi 'I ornato pUnts. 1 now have ready for shipment Fleet plants ?nd Cabbage plants ss follows: Party Jersey Wakeficl ls, Charleston Lonee Typ? Wakefield?, ?nd Henderson S-JC .?on.s. These heine thc best known tellable varieties to all experienced truck plants are grown out in ibo open air near salt water and ff ?.'.',/. ' ^sm farmers, These plants are grown out in tin? o Bf. AV " \ V w"' altind severe cold without injury. 8v/S? , . :? X -', M 1?, ?res: ?1.0? for SOO plants. In lots of 1,000 n ,, : #U;*?T JW sonJ, 5.0CC to 9.000 nt $1.25 per thousand, 10.000 an \ . -?,-?',?" "c~? Sm Wc hav< special low Express rates on vegetable .JW OOO to 5.CC9 nt $1.?0 per thou and over at $1.05 per thousand. !c plants from this point. All orders ?viii !>... shipped C O. D. unless you prefer sending money With orders. 1 would sdVitc sending money with orders. You will save ibo charges for returning tho t*. O. I>V Other plnits v ill be ready In Pcbniary. Your orders will havo my prompt and personal attention. "When In need ol Vegetable plants civc nie a trial order) -, I guarantee satisfaction. Address all orders to i?* -?IA^????^.?..?.?...II, , inm^p GIBBES Guaranteed Machinery. INCLUDES GASOLINE AND STEAM ENGINE8,PORT ,\ Bl,IO AND STATIONARY BOILERS, SAWMILLS, jEDGERS, PLANERS, SHINGLE, LATH, STAVE AND 'RUSSES, BRICK KINDRED LINES. '! Our stock is tho most varied and completo in tho Southern Stales, prompt shipment heilig our bpecial ty. A postal card will bring our salesman. GIBBES MACHINERY COMPANY, : ip; I it, i?.n:?, ruaiovno, aiii.svuir/, CORN MILLS, COTTON GINS, (MAKING OUTFITS AND KINDI ti Box KO, Columbia, S. O. ? wm PLANTS FOR THE SOUTH Wakefield and Succession Cabbage, Sij; boston la?t luce, and larqe type Caull/.ovvur. Crown from seed* ol the best pro WC rt m the world. We love worked diligently on our stock (or 20 years, and lt s safe to say that to-day they are thc host ob tainabie. Ihr? boc success illy stood thc mosl severe lesli <d cold and drouth and arc,eliot! on b) III? most prominent [{rowersol e? i ry si t lion ol the South. We guarani*? full count and safe arrival ol all goods shipped by express PRICE S Cabbage JK<I UttUCC f. o. b. 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