The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 14, 1938, Page 7

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- HOL NORE JAW,COUSIN - O\DN'T T TELL NE 4 NINE HUNNERT TIMES THAT DALY DOUBLE" - DOOLEN TOU MAE TO =1 WEEP NN NMouTH 1| SHET UP TAGHT 22 ABSOLVTEWN SURE NOW WNOW WHO'S 'GONNG WIN THE SUNNNS\DE HANDICAP, WHY BOTHER WITH THAT GUY, “DAWN DOUBLE"? WE DON‘T NEED Hm WANT AD INF ORIATION ATTRACTIVE heated rent. Apt. A, Shabaldak Apts one of Y Owl Res- | FOR RENT | Shitanda taurant In Douglas s to the words to ti s Count five line. Daily rate per line for consecutive | i sertions: average Reasonable. 223 Gold St | i | FOR RENT — Garage. | e Inquire after 5 p.m., ] Additional days - Minimum charge ..50c Copy must be in the office by 2| ‘clock in the afternoui to insure usertion on same Qay. . We accepi ads over (elephone Fom persons listed in leicphone tkatory. | close board, for quiet, i {ROOM for rent Wwith three, gentlemen preferved, no children. Blue 245. FOR RENT — Steam heated room. | Phone 219, | ROOM FOR rent, furnishied, heated, i g in. Phone Black 380. Phone $1—Ask for Ad-taker. | oo o Phom,i Green 675. 2 FOR In case of error “'3 has been stopped beioie ex- piration, advertiser please noti- | fy this office (Phone 374) -at || ‘:once and same will be given | attention. { THE DAILY ALASKA EMFPIRE GARAGE FOR RENTReasonable rent. Phone Blue 90. FOR RENT--Two office rooms in First National Bank Bldg. Inguire at bank. UOZY, warm, furn, apts. Lignt water, dishes, cooking utensils | and bath. Rensonable at brivk" FOK bALL MOI)H. A md up. Co. Phone 202 WANTED WANTED—An woman — permanent satisfactory. Write Empire Service Motor experienced sales- | position if | Y 131 GOOD PIANO for | Phone 184, ale, $65 | | fully eW 18 FT. GAS : “~vencedor equipped for trolling or. pleasure. | Suitable home for man and wife. Rock Dump Float. FOR TUDOR, driven only 9,000 miles. N(w) lgm d;l uxe radio and WOMAN WANT*} work by hour fe Loy BUpnis. day. Phone Green 705. WANTED — Furnished _apartment| with bedroom. Phone 205. ! with 270. | WANTED—Furnished house 2 or 3 bedrooms. Phone Black 2 FOR SALE—] Beaull!ul fur (oav, and WANTED TO EUY Wood \\olkmg ;){t(ljfir] furs. Room 438, Gastineau power tools. Write P, O. Box 1713. —- | WANTED TO BUY income property preferred; furnished or unfurnished. Address L. Empu‘v POR SALM——xarmUn} x‘n.mvlc 9th & B streets, 100-foot frontage on B St; one 2-ton mining car; one — stationary gas engine; two large WANTEDASm'Ul utrugc near "”'i ding pots and plunder of all, neau. H. Hamsom, Fanshaw, Al-| de riptions. See Lee Rox at the G MlSCELLm FOUS —Beautiful fur coat and i other furs. Room 438, Gastineau *JOIN OUR Dollar-a-Week Club. “Hotel. | Channel Apparvl Shop. FOR SALE—200-gallon steel tank, FUARANTEED Realistic Perma- Phone 250. nents, $450. Finger wave, 65c. Lole’s Beauty Shop. telephone FOR SALE—vaw 33 Tudor Ford 961, 315 Decker Wa: V-8; exceptionally good condition. Phone Green 462. Cash preferred. FOR SALE—Canarles. 202 6th St.' FOR SALE—U & I Lunch, Owner quitting business. Write P.O. Box 4 2274 or phone 334. FOR. SALE—City Float Beer Parlor. | Phone 541 after 4 p.m. - G.H.MAGKAY fURN your old gold in‘n value cash or trade at Nugg=¢ Shop. tele"mph interests and in 1896 was elected a director of the Postal and Cemmercial companies. A year later he became Vice- President of both companies and President upon the death of his father in 1902. Later he organized the Mackay Companies, of which he became President, as well as |h(‘1d of its various telegraph, cable real estate subsidiary com- panies. {ready market of dollars which is met by a production of some $200,000 worth of domestic THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, NOV DVE THINK T WaS BEWND T& DOOR WHEN TH BRANG WAS PASSED OWT,COUSIN 22 < DALY DOUBLE" AN' ME WEV ‘GONE (N A PODNERSHP - WE'S GONNE FORK OVER Vs OF ALL KIS WINNIN'G - | Miss Dorothy Russell, of Auburndale, M: asing her lipstick to write on her wrist the humber of & taw involved in a hit-and-run accident at Salisbury, Mas: which may be seen on her wrist, to arrest a Newbury- } the number, port man. Agru‘ulturo in A Iuahu Is Only In First Stages. Says ()Idmwl , Agricultural production in Alaska is yet in the very first stages, cording to L. T. Oldroyd, Director of Extension and Agriculture Exper- iments for the University of Alaska | who has arrived here from Sitka jand will leave for his headquarters in Fairbanks tomorrow. There is Alaska a almost, potential a million in products, Greatest possibilities for the pros- pective farmer in the Territory lies in the dairy industry. In connection with the raising of milch cows the Agricultural Ex- periment seryice has developed an ensilage composed of green oats and peas which will suffice for three-fourths of the necessary ra- tions for the cattle. It has been proven that the ensilage can cured in economically built the northern interior. At present experiments are being | conducted which promise the devel- opment of a successful legume pro- duct from the ladak -alfalfa seed. If the results from this experimen- tation prove acceptable the combin- ation ensilage and legume feed will soive (he dairyman’s ration prob- lem. Ensilage as now produced is about half the cost of hay. Peultry, Fur Farming Poultry farming and fur farming ate the best industries for the set- tler in Southeast Alaska. Soil here ac- be | trench silos even in such cold countries as of the service in Southeast Alaska i “within ass., made cosmetic hxstory by vhich she lice used | Alaska has a very successful 4-H Club program organized under this extension service. There are at pres- ent over 500 members in tk futur aska farmers e 12-Year-Old Skipper Gets His Deer Little Skpper MacKinnon, 12- year-old son of Simpson Mac- Kinnon of the Alaska Laundry, is probably the school hero today. Not many kids can go hunt- | ing with his dad and his pals, ! and when they do its seldom | that they bag any game. Skipper not only went hunt- ing, and not only did he bag some game, but he showed the old boys a trick or two by dropping a nice 130-pound five- point buck, the trophy of the day’s hunt at Barlow Cove. | Marksmen Skipper was ac- companied on the trip by Dr. G. F. Freeburger, Percy Rey- | nolds, R. L. Bernard, and his dad, Sim MacKinnon. Three | deer were bagged during the hunt. R. 0. A. CONVENES ON TUESDAY EVENING young clubs throughout Al- 14, 1938 By »}/ THAT'S WHET BILLIE DE BECK Bty WE SA\D - SUT--I\ A To Wo\0 OUT FER NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR PATENT Serial Nu. 09406 In the United States Land Office for the Juneau Land District at Anchorage, Alaska. In the Matter .of the Application of the HIRST-CHICHAGOF MIN- ING COMPANY, a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Washington, for patent to the ELSINOR, SHAFFER, BERTHA, FRIES, TRINAD, BERNARD, SHOLIN and RHEA lode mining claims and the BER- THA MILLSITE, embraced in U. 5. Mineral Survey No, 1502 A and B, situated in the Sitka -Mining and Recording District, First Di- vision, Territory of Alaski at Kimshan Cove on Chichagof Island, and forming one contig- uous group. NOTICE IS HEREBY (GIVEN that the . Hirst-Chichagof Mining Company, a corporation organized under the laws of the te .cf Washington, whose postoffice ad- dress is Kimshan Cove, Alaska, has filed its application in the United Slates Land Office at Anchorage, Alaska, for patent for the ELSI- NOR, SHAFFER, BERTHA, FRIES, TRINAD, BERNARD, SHOLIN and RHEA lode mining claims and the {BERTHA . MILLSITE, included U, S. Mineral Survey No. 1502 A and B, situated at Kimshan |Cove on Chichagof Island, Territory of Alaska, First Judicial Division, Sitka Mining and Recording Dis- trict, and more particulariy de- (scvibed as follows: ELSINOIx LODE Beginning at Cor. No. 1 on line of mean high tide, Kimshan Cove, whence U. S. M. M. No. 1502 bears N 88° 31" 307 W 1476.23 ft. thence N 70° 00’ E 520.00 ft. to Cor. No. 2; thence S 12" E. 1500.00 ft. to Cor. No. 3; thence S 70" 00" W 605.00 ft. to Cor. No. 4; thence N 12 12’ W. 636.90 ft. to lipe of mean high tide, Kimshan Cove, and r. No. thence N. 29° 39’ & 324.55 ft. to Cor. No. 6; thence N 10° 30° W 146,00 ft. to Cor. No. . 7; thence S 87° 33" W 5720 ft. to Cor. No. 8; thence N 22° 52° W 9760 ft. to Cor. No.9; thence N 86° 27" W 143.10 ft. to Cor. No. 10; thence N 18° 12’ W. 82.90 ft. to Cor, No. 11; thence N 19° 23’ E 11650 ft. to Cor. No. 12; thence N 7° 10" E 14250 ft. to Cor. No. 13; thence; N 54° 44° W 35.70 ft. to Cor, No. 1, the place of hegin- ning, contlining 18.466 acres. SHAFFER LODE Beginping at Cor. No, 1, ident- jcal with Cor. No, 2, Bertha Lode, this survey; whence U. S. M. M. No. 1502 bears N 48° 53’ 50” W 2314.78 ft.; thence N 70° 00" E 62000 ft. to Car. No. 2; thenge 8,35° 15’ E1580,00 {t, to Cor, No. 3; thence S 70° 00" W 620.00. ft. to Cor. No, 4; thence N 35° 15’ W 1500.00 ft. to place of beginning, containing 20.598 acres. BERTHA LODE Beginning at Cor. No. 1, on line of mean high tide Kimshan Cove; whence U. S. M. M. No. 1502 bears N 36° 54’ 40” W 2118.19 ft.; thence N 70° 00’ E 502.40 ft. to Cor, No. 2; thence S 35° 15’ E 1500.00 ft. to Cor. No. 3; thence S 70° 00 W 620.00 ft. to Cor. No. 4; thence N 15 W 144620 ft. to Cor. No. 5; thence N 43° 22’ E 115.75 ft. to Cor. No. 1, the place of beginning, con- taining 20.528 acres. FRIES LODE % Beginning at Cor. No. 1, ident- ical with amended location cor- 150000 ft. “to Cor place of beginning 20.598 acres. SHOLIN LODE Beginning at Cor. 1 ident- ical with Cor. No. Fries Lode, this ey; whence U. £ M. No. 1502 bears N 24" 29 o W 3484.64 ft.; thence N 70 00" E 62000 ft. to Cor. No. 2 thence S 35° 15 E 1500.00 ft. to Cor. No. thence S 70° 00° W 620.00 fL. to point for Cor. No. 4; identical with Cor. No. 1 Kay Lode, this survey, from whence W. C. bears 8 35° 15" E 14000 ft.; thence from true point for Cor. No. 4 N 35" 15 W. 150000 ft. to Cor. No. 1, the place of beginning, contain- ing 20598 acres. RHEA LODE Beginning at. Cor. No. 1 on line of mean high tide Kimshan Cove, whence U. S. M. M. No. 1502 bears N 10° 16° 00" W 1863.16 ft.; thence S 68" 00° E 92.30 ft. to Cor. No. 2; thence N 85° 29" E 147,30 ft. to Cor No. 3; thence N 8" 24° W 75.60 ft. to Cor. No. 4; thence N 70° 50" E 87.12 ft. to Cor. No. 5; thence S 00" E 335.00 ft to Cor. No. 6; thence S 16° 20’ W 150000 ft. to Cor. No. 7; thence N 65° 00° W 606.90 ft. to Cor, No. 8; thence N 16° 20" E 129645 . ft. to Cor. No. 1, the place of beginning, containing 19.742 acres; conflicting with P Lode, this swvey, 1814 excluded; total area claimed in Rhea Lode, 17.928 acres. BERTHA MILLSITE Bel.,mnmg at Cor. No. 1, whence M, M. No. 1502 bears N fl' 40” W 189698 fL.; thence 38" E 217.20 ft. to No. 2; thence N 52° 35" E ft. to Cor. No. 3; thence S, 12’ E. 34050 ft. to Cor. No. 4; thence S 70° 07" W 336.00 ft. to Cor, No. 5; thence N 16° 40° W 287.00 ft. to Cor. No. 6; thence N 42° 39" E 9540 ft. to Cor. No. 1, the place pf beginning, .con- taining 2.569 acr the same being owned and used by ap- plicant as a millsite in connec- tion with' the working of the Bertha Lode claim, this survey. United States Mineral Monument No. 1502, to which this survey is Itied, is marked by a cross (X) on an exposed outcrop of bedrock on top of a prominent point six feet above the line of mean high tide on the North shore of Kimshan Cove, in , Latitude 57° 41" 20” North, | Longitude 136° 06’ 45” West, chisel- ed U. 8. M. M. No. 1502, from which a cross (X) on a cliff face six feet | high, chiseled U. S. M..M. 1502 B. O. bears North 7° 18 East 23.70 (feet, and the summit of Doolth | Moyntain bears South 13°.30. East. These claims are located . upon |ground unsurveyed except in Min- eral Survey No. 1502 A and B, and lextend from the mean high tide | {line of Kimshan Cave to the sum- {mit of the ridge between Kimshan | Cove and Klag Bay, at o maxifum | elevation of 1770, feet, in approxi- |mate Latitude 57" 41’ North, Longi- tude 136° 07 West. | The names of adjoining claims are as follows: Sunday Queen Lode, unsurveyed, Divide Lode, this sur- vey, Frances R. Lode, this survey, and Kay Lode, this survey, but none of the same are included in this application. The Sunday Queen Lode claim, |with which a conflict is mentioned | herein, is an unpatented claim own- ed by applicant. | The total area embraced in the above claims and claimed by the No. containing o. 1 5 _4(, N 3 :(, Phone 723———115-2nd_St. THE ROYAL | BEAUTY SALON | OPEN EVENINGS | “If your hair is not becoming | to you — You snould be coming to us.” GARBAGE HAULED Reasonable Monthly Rates E..0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 212 Fhone 4783 Sanitary Meat Co. FOR QUALITY MEATS AND POUL1.% FREE DELIVERY Call Phones: 13 and 49 Pay’n Takit PHONES 92 or 93 Iree Delivers Meats Win We Sell for LESS Because We Sell for CASH! George Brothe Near Third Seward Street JAMES C. COOPER Certified Public Accountant Authorized to practice boefore the U. S. Treasury Department and Board of Grocerizs, s and Beer Fresh Liquors U. lax Appeal NEW ALASKAN HOTEL So. Frarklin Street —Phone Single O | o The Iuneau Laundry Franklin Street betwesa Front and Second Stries o PHONE 359 i | HOME GROCERY | * - Phone 146 e Home Liquor Store—Tel. 699 | BODD[NG TRANS‘_._‘R I American M —Phone 38 | |\ MARINE puaNE HERMLE & THIBODEAU | | BUILDING P | | Rock—Coal Hauting i Stove—Fuel 0il Delivery I PETER PAN BEAUTY SHOP—Triangle Bldg. Telephone—-221 Specialty on Permanents Thomas Hardware Co. ! PAINTS — OILS Builders' and Shelf HARDWARE JUNEAU - YOUNG Hardware Company PAINTS—OIL—GLASS Shelf and Heavy Hardware Guns and Ammunition When in Need of DIESEL OIL—STOVE OIL YOUR COAL CHOICE GENERAL HAULING STORAGE and ("RATING CALL US JUNEAU TRANSFER Phone 48—Night Phone 696 GENERAL MOTORS DELCO and MAYTAG PRODUCTS W. P. JOHNSON “The Frigidaire Man” “Smiling Service” I gl g Bert’s Cash Grocery En i ] PHONE 36 Free Delivery For very promp: LIQUOR DELIVERY Juneau | 4 SATISFACTION IN FOOD QUALITY AT UNITED FOOD CO. TELEPHONE—16 It 1t's Paint We ilave J¢! IDEAL PAINT SHOP FRED W. WENDT PHONE 548 COAL PHONE 412 ALASKA DOCK & STORAGE CO. : FAMILY SHOE STORE “Juneau’s Oldest Exelusive Shoe Store” LOU HUDSON-—Manager Seward St.———————Jufecan | | - 3 RELIABLE TRANSI-ER Our trucks go any place any time. A tank for Diesel Ol and a tank for Crude OM save burn.r tiouble. PHONE 149, NIGHT 148 Mc(,AUL MOTOR COMPANY Dedge and Plymouth Dealers l n' applicant is 162.420 acres. Any and all persons claiming ad- versely any of the above described | veins, lodes or premises are. required | to file notice of their adverse claims with the Register of the United | | States Land Office at Anchorage, ‘Alaakz within the period of pub-| |lication or within eight (8) momhs‘ | thereafter, or they will be barred {by virtue of the provisions of the "xtatules. sSecond Lieutenant Cortland 8. Brooks announces that the last in a series of seven meetings of the Group School of the Reserve Offi- cers Training Corps will be held in In the Interior a man may prac-|the Goldstein Building Tuesday tice diversified farming on a 160- | night at 7:30 o’clock. These meetings acre homestead and provide him-|are for the purpose of disseminating self and family with a very satis-|information on the scientific side| factory living. Small grains will pro-| of military activities. It is planned duce around 30 bushels to the acre.|to resume the sessions sometime Potatees will go as high as 100 sacks | after January 1, 1939. to the acre as compared to 60 or| Dr. E. F. Vollert, MED, RES, will 70 sacks in the spud regions in the)address the group on Administra- BStates. In Alaska the spuds hringitmn of Medical Affairs in the War about $3.00 per 100 pounds, in the|Department. states the price will figure around| Br. Abraham Levine, late of 70 cents per hundredweight. Cost|Breoklyn New York and now asso- of growing is not appreciably higher | ciated with the Army Medical Corp in Alaska. Most of the potato mar-|in the Juneau area, is a new mem- ket in this country is supplied by ber of the group. | O O s 2300 'WRIGH1S CELEBRATE WEDDING ANNIVERSARY According to Mr. Oldroyd a man | with $2,500 and a family can come |’ ’ Saturday evening the Gold Street residence of Mr. and Mrs. C. W Mr. Mackay Wwas a man of med- |to Alaska, settle on a homestead, ium height and muscular physique {and by intelligent farming become and successful within a | Wright was the scene of their paper |wedding apniversary, and in cele- home much of the time. He was who kept himself in excellent physi- | prosperous _ educated at Vaugirard College in cal condition. A game of squash, comparnuv"l/ short time. Paris and Beaumont College at |tennis, or handball was a part of The Territory of Alaska, in coop-‘b"ali(m of this the young couple en~ ‘Windsor, England. this daily program. At one time he | gration with the United States Gov- | tertained with a pinochle party. Goes Into Business maintained a racing stable, Ban-|ernment, maintains three experi-| A centerpiece of paper flowers, Returning to the United States, aster, Heno -and Ageful, being | mental stations. At Matanuska un- set off by paper plates and, cutlery, Mr. Mackay at the age of 20 en- among his best known thorough- der ‘Don L. Irwin, at Fairbanks un-! formed attvactive decorations for tered - his father’s business which breds. der’ Mr. E. Peterson, and at Peters- | the occasion. Prizes were won dur- then -consisi:4 of the Commercial burg under J. B. Loftus ing the evening by Mrs. Ray Peter- Cable Company, with lines from The éxtension service is an edu- man, Dick Dalzell and Mr and Mrs. Massachusett; through Nova Scotia eational program run in conjunction Dd\'e Burnett, to. Ireland, and which conneeted You will not want to miss Marye | with the experiment stations. Its| Guests present inclwded Mr. and with the Postal Telegraph Company ' Berne and Ernest Ehlers when they | purpose is to disseminate scientific! Mrs. Ray Peterman, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Burford, Mr. and Mrs. Dick Dalzell and Mr. and Mrs, Dave Bur- in the United States. The son be- present one of their delightful pro- nformation to the rural homemak- father’s real estate, mining unlewembrr 14, H H adv.| Florence Zimmerman is in charge, nett, ner; whence U. S. M. M. No. 1502 bears N 16° 34’ 20" W | 2030.24 ft.; thence N 70° 00" E 516.30 ft. to Cor. No. 2; thence S 86° 14 E 12880 ft. to Cor. No. 3; thence S 35° 15" E 1446.20 ft. to Cor. No. 4; thence S 70° 00" W 620.00 ft. to Cor. No. 5; thence N 35° 15° W 1500.00 ft. to Cor,:No. 1, the place of be- ginning, coptaining 20.537 acres, inclusive of area in conflict with Rhea Lode, this survey, 1.814 acres; total area claimed in Fries Lode, 20.537 acres. TRINAD LODE Beginning at Cor. No. 1, ident- jcal with Cors. Nos. 2-3-4, Bernard, Bertha and Shaffer Lodes,, respectively, this survey; whence U. S. M. M. No. 1502 bears N 43° 32’ 10” W.3788.96 1t.; thence N 70° 00' E 620.00 ft. to Cor. No. 2; thence S 35" 15’ E 1500.00 ft. to Cor. Nd. 3; thence S 70° 00' W 620.00 ft. to Cer. No. 4; thence N 35° 15 W 150000 ft. to Cor. No. 1, the place of « beginning, containing 20.598 acres, inclusive of area in conflict with Sunday Queen Lode, unsurveyed, 2256 acres; total area claimed in Trinad Lode, 20.598 acres. BERNARD LODE Beginning at Cor. No. 1, ‘ident- ical with Cors. Nos. 2-4-4, Sholin, Pries and Bertha Lodes, respectively, this survey; whence U. S, M. M. No. 1502 bears N 34" 25’ 107 W 358683 ft.; thence N 70° 00’ E 620.00 ft. to Cor. No. 2; mmence S 35° 15 E 1500.00 ft. to Cor. No. 3; thence | S 70° 00 W. 620.00 ft. to Cort No. 4; thence N 35° 15 W is exceptionally rich and productive ) but costs of ciearing the land runs| to about $1500 .per acre, making row or scatter crops impracticable | frem an economic standpoint. llome-Grown Vegetables - Paily — All Kinds - gt Callforma Groeery THE PURE FOODS STORE Telephone 478 Prompt Delivery { FOR INSURANCE _ See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Bldg. Complete Cleaning and e CltsiL WINDOW cu:umc PICK-UP and DELIVERY || ; " PHONE 485 ' “SAM—THE—TAILOR"” Lays Cable to Cuba. In 1899, Mr. Mackay sought per- | mission: of the United States gov- ernment to -extend his company’s 7 _|cable service: from Cuba to the .. |United States in competition with :,m existing cable. The application lat: first was denied, but later was rm‘aneed and the cable was laid..In 11901, he supervised the expenditure ,of $0,000,000 in the laying of a |Pacific cable by way of Hawalii to the Orient. Financier, Builder of Inter- national Communica- tion Systems, Dies GEORGE A. LINGO, { Register, First publication, Nov. 2, 1938. Last publication, Jan. 17, 1989, Phone 642 TRIPLEX Dry Cleaning CUTS CLEANING COSTS rom Pag(' One) (Conunued Mr. Mackay in 1898 married Miss Katherine Duer, member of a prominent New York family. There were born to them two daughters, Katherine (Mrs. Kenneth O'Brien) and Ellin (Mrs. Trving Berlin) and a son, John: M. Mackay. Mr. and Mrs. Mackay were divorced in 1914. The latter was. married lal.er to Dr. Joseph Blake. famous Borianza Mine producing $300,000,000" in six years. Seeking investments for his capi- tal, the elder Mackay joined with James Gordon Bennett in the for- “ mation of the Commercial Cable Company and the subsequent pur- chase asi.a “land feeder” of the Postal Telegraph Company. The younger Mackay -spent the early part of his life in Europe, where his parents then made their e e e ..FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GREASES GAL — OILS JUNEAU MOTORS Foot of Main Street - - - A GREAT TREAT _—— Juneaul.n-berll‘fis,hc. a5 o came closely identified with his grams at the Parish Hall, Monday, | ers and farmers of the area, Miss

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