r1 "'i1.11;111;111..1. . . . li ri'BLMFIKD EVERY WKIfVl)AY, BV men n toimsofl bobtbm tramm, r KUB BTXBEZ, TIOSEHTA, r. '. C tkhmi.ji.oo a year. N (HibasrlpMoaa received .r a ebortcr iww wiaa three month. Wnwiw iflene aollclted from all tmrta Hm country, Honour win be taken of HMnfmoM oninamnivatllon. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. TI0HEST4 LODGE A. I. O. ofO.F H f E KT) ' every Krlriav avnnlnir at ll o'elork. In the Hall forineaiy ocUied r IH uoou I emiiiar. W. K. ItU.tS.N. O. ttW.IAWTKR,Sw. 17-tf. Dr. J. K. Blaine, fFKICK ami residence opposite the " ' Lawrence Moiiae. Office da v Wodne. laye ami Hatunlava. Sfl-tr. W. P. MerciUiott, mmXKV AT LAW, ror. Kim ami r Walnut St-.., TlonoMa. I'a. I hav txacM-liUol tuvaclf with Hon. A. It. Kicli iikiikI, of Mcadvllla, l'a.t in the practice of law in rorcai lamuiy. li-iy . IWTall mm, MUM w. TAT FKTTIf TATK, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Mtm ativM, riO.YK.1TA. PA T. W.Haya, ATTORNEY AT LAW. ami Wot art fustic, Reynolda Itnkill A t'o.'a Utk, tteaeca St., Oil Cltv, fa. S-ly r. BIMKBAB. li. B. SMILST, KIXXKJlt A) SMILEY, Attorneys at Law. Franklin, Pa. TJRACTICE In tha eereral Courts of V aaago, Crawford. 1-oreNt. and ad loin Ing notintic. JIMv . ItABHM, D. . PAJMBTT, HA KRIS A FASSKTT, alorneye at Law, TltuarlUa feno'a, PRACTICE In all tha Conrta of Warren a tYawfunt, jrurMt aud enango ( pun- Mm. 49-tf CENTRAL HOUSE, PONNER A AUNEW UMK'K. 1 it Aohkw, Proprietor. Tlila I a new liouae, and hajut been flttml up fur tha Bocoinliirxlatio.i of tha public. A portion i in raimnae ar the pubiie la aoiioitotl W-IT lawranct Houm, fTMOXKTA, I'A.. WILLIAM LAW I RKNCK. PnorRHCToR. Tl.la bona- la eentrally located. Everything new and wall furnUhed Kn parlor accommoda tion anil etriel attention eiven to uuimt Yetable ami Fruit of all kimia aerved h their aeaaon. Sample room for Coin- taereial A gent a. FOXIEST HOUSE, D BLACK PROPRIETOR. Oppolte t'eurt llonne, TionewU, Pa. J net Baed. Everything new and rlvan and freah. The beat of lliiior kept constantly n nand. A portion or the public patron la reaneetfully aoliniUKl. 4-IT-lr Tioneata Hotiaa. r T. LATIMER U, Elm St. Tlo- vJ neita. Pa., at the mouth of theercek. Mr. I Iiaa thoroughly renovated the Ttoaeota Hnue, and re-furiiiMliml It mm lUilv. All whi uatmniae hiitvwill lie well entertained at reasonable rate. 37 ly Weber House. 'pYLKHNlirHtJII.l'A. C. II. WKRKR, I rnoraiBToa. Mr. Wclwr lia auntn taken immmmmIiiii of IIiIh well-known Itnimr anal will he happy to t-ulrtalu alt M old v-iinifMiifirx. aiif, any iihumht 01 nrw nun,, hmi atixiiiuiKMtatloiia Tor KvU, ami ri vellent hIhIiIIiiji. HI-Hiii. Dr. J. L. Aconb, PHYSICIAN AN'lLRfJK()X,whohBa 1 hatl ItfUea yeara' eaperirnce In a larjca bikhmmhiiui nrartK-M, will attend all j'renmainual Calla. Office in Ilia lrua and ' ttroeery Ntor. located In Tidioule, near I IOIDUM UOUH. IN MIS STORK WIM, UR FOUND A full aiMortiTtffnt of Medlclumi, IJnunrs TnLajMA (Mm Ut.tU.k.. i J 1-- l)l.... oil. Cutlery, all of the boat quality, and win mi aoia at reaaonanie raira. lK. CHAM. . HAY, an experienred Thyaician and DrumM from Mew York. ha rharx of Uie M.ure. All preaoripiioua iui upaccurauiy. a. a. t. jo. r. nut. 4, a nu-r. JfAYil'JLRKACO,, ' BACKERS tvirner of Elm A Walnut Sta. Tioneata. Dank of Diaenant and Dapoail. , latareat allowed ea Time Depoaita. Celleeeiea mid on all tbaFrineipal point . f U V. H, CoIlctin aoilcited. 18-lV. D. W. CLARK, (ooitMtKeio.icn' ri.KRK, ro a bt 00., pa.) JSLIiAL ESTATE AGENT, HOUSES and I-oU tor Sal and RENT Wild Land for uie. 1 . I have anperlnr fwHitiea ftr aaoertainlna; 4li eondition nftaxeaand tax deed, Ac., and am theremr o, null And to act intelli annlly aa aarnt of tlinm lirinr at a dia me, ewnintt land in tbe Ooatv. Ofllc in iConitnlainnr Itoou). Court Noqm. Ti9iiU, I'a. tiit. P.W.CLARK, MEW BILLIARD ROOMS! ADJUINIXfi the Tionexta Uouxe, at tlio mouih of Ti.mesU Cri'tik. The tablca and room are uew.aud evervthiiiK kept in rder. To lover of the guiio a cordial ?tiviU(1ii a extruded to 00111 and plar in Iba new room. ' i. T. LA TIM KR. Lo.e. Th R'ubhcaii ORlce I"Kf:P.S coiiulHiitly on hand a lare a- niiMcn. Warranl xtiiiioiii 1 1 maiik I'eciis. Muriuiipoi. ho u(i -uoAp for tsh. ouuimeuii. At. to tf. it VOL. Vll. NO. 10. WP.1, F. BLUM, BLACKSMITH AND VAOON-MAKER. Center of Church aud Elm Streota, TIONE8TA rY. Thia Arm I prepared to do all work in lla line, and will warrant everything done at their tipa to Rive atlnlutlon. far tluular attautlon given to . dioiiKiiior.ixu, riiv thm trial, and yo will not re gret it. i.viy. PHOTOGRAFI1 GALLERY. ILM NTKBIT, south or Ronixsox v iTunK. A OXXER7 Tioneita. Fa., M. CARPENTER, ... Proprietor. ,-' v; Picture taken In ntl the lateat stvlea the art. - '26-ir ic. ii.Li:ir-, TiniocTB, Pa. Dealer in FIm Watoluaj Cleski, Jewflry, BaMtaokaa, etc All repnirinar In tlila line ncntlv d"iie and warrantml. Par ticular attention paid ' th repalrliiK of vvatclip. PAPA IJAI.IMVIA 1 1 ax ooiiol a sewing: machine DEPOT IWj In hi BOOT and SHOE STORE, A4d In connection with liia other luinesn lie linn coiiMuiitlv In Mtoro Hie OROVER A BARER, 1K)MESTU VICTOR, ; WILSON 8HUTTLK, WHITSEY, BOWK, ,' IILEKS, WH KRLKR A WILSON, HOME SHUTTLE, and will FURNISH TO ORDER any Sewing Machine in the market, at lint prion, will) ail Uia f which the Cuinpanio Rive, and will DELIVER THE MACHINES Ill any art of Forest County, and give all uecenwtrv limtructiniiM to learner. Kredle ffft mU Marlilae, Milk a4 Tkra4 alwayi In More. TiDIOUTK, TA,, June, IHT4. 11-tf NEW JEWELRY STORE In Tltejii. M.. SMITH, ATCH?HXER & JEWELER, At SlfPERIOlt STORE. ALL WORK WARRANTED. A Large qd Huperior K(Oii( of WHtfliew, Olooltaj, . . aud Jewelry, CONSTANTLY ON HAND. Mm SMITH ha Ant inachi uakinir all ourt m a .i.h V.lw.i. hat mar be miaMing or broken. He Mar- am an in worn. The iiatrou&ca of I ho lUxeua of r'orom Comuv la r,.,.. ully aulicited. All he ak i a fair trial. ttr SUlsc llinEforUie Foreat rvepubli.au it will pay. ' mm S1i2bltaa, fP" TiONKSTA, PA., JULY 22, 1871. Jl'.MPIlXM TUB WAT. Tom Totta, well-known locomotire engineer in England and the State, i tlie aelf-accreilited hero of the follow Ina wonderful itory : Well, gentlemen, I nay you'll think it' lie, but I can't help that; you liavo anked me to tell it; and all I can my ia, if you'd been in my place you'd hare scon it. I had been diiting the "Witch" fur about seven nioutha, and naweet thing he wa. I never was half as fond of an engine as I was for her. She was the kind of machine a man only gets once in a lifetime. - She made her steam qujck, waseary on fuel, started on" lively, and wcut like a deer. Her cylinders were teen-iuch, her btroke twenty-two, and her drivers seven feet tx, and she was as kind to handle as a baby. To tee her runiCdTwiib a heavy load, light and gay, was enough to shame tba "Juno," "Venus" and "Helen,''anJ other eiglilceu-inck ma chines. 8he Dever wanted fixing on. Ve nus' was always goiug hi and out ot the shop to be titivated, and if there's anything I don't like, it's an engine that all the time wants to be titivated. She was always ready and willing for work. Why, bless you I she was only washed out foi the sake of cleanliness she didn't need it a bit. She was the tidiest thing I ever seen seemed a? though dirt wouldn't stick to her. Well, wlmt I am going to tell came otr years ago, beforo 1 Iff; the old country, and it is one of the best rail roadssingle track then, though it's got three now, and four in some spots. Well, the "Witch" and I were put n the mail one of the fastest trains : and they went like sixty in them days. The euginper was fined a shilling for every minute he lost. lie durst not go slow for fug, unless he wanted to lose ins day s pay. lie had to keen going right along, and see things be- ore lie got in signi 01. ein. We were running north one darkish wintry dflr. and were luakiuc our best streaks. 1 reckon we were troiuc about i i , m hut mues ah nour. . I was saying to myself, "site's going her prettiest." when "we suddenly shot ahead, as if we had been fired out of a cannon. I knew what that meant we had brokeu loose; we hudu'l a car behind. Tho coupling had broke between the tender aud the first couch. How we flew, to be sure! I whhtled the guaid to brake up tbe train. How we buuuded along ! I could make out no oblecls along side we seemed to go faster and fast er; we must have got ot fit a one hundred and forty tnilet on hour. n was a straight piece ot track for some miles. 1 did not shut off steam, directly we broke, for I didn't want the train to run into us. which miiiht happen if they did not hear uie whistle for brakes. , It was lucky I kept her - going, for just as I had about enough ot such flyinp, a inau started out about six hundred yards before us holding a red nog. There was nothing in the way, so I knew that something must be wrouu with the track. - lou might as well have tried to stop whirlwind as (ho "Witch" in that distance. Her speed was fright ful. There wasn't much time to think, and as we could not stop, the faster we went the better; so I gave her what more steam there was. She seem ed to have some "go m reserve, for we shot past that red Hug like a itabh. I saw men staudiug horror-struck. "Jlill, I saiJ, "quick! get on the coke, and see what's ahead. He looked, and wept deadly' pale, touerea an wu oacK in a taint. liy this time I could see plain euoiigh what was wrcng. There wax a gap in tbe track where a bridge had gone down. You can't ffkucy my feelings just then. Going- to death death, swift and terrible at about two miles a minute gettiug nearer, and nearer An instant more the gap! "God have mercy," I ebrieked. V1), Hould you believe it? that en gine junt cleared Uit gup! It was fifteen fuet across, and about sixty dbt i&eji. She jumped that gup like a stag, and what's more, she struck the rails aU fiht on the other side, and kept right along, just as if she had uot no ticed the gnp! . 1 stirred iSill up, and, with both of us at the brake, we managed at Jast to stop the "Witch." fcbe was ua a tear liat day, but I ever dreamed she'd jump the gap that's a fuel. From Taylor' $ Fast Life OH the Modern JJigfuvay, One hundred new puletHn for sew- machine have been granted with- tt 2'Ciir' ' T a MAX ADELKR'H Jt IH. HCKATCHKM. Mr. Alexander Johnson, of Towan da, is dead. He was bilious, Mr. Alexander Johnson was and he saw the following paragraph from the' pen of Dr. Hall : "If a bilious man wants to get well, an I is in no specinl hurry, all that he has to do is to lie down out-of-doors between two broad boards, and stay there until he gets ravenously hungry, Mr. Johnson followed this advic9, and calmly fell asleep with a broad ooard on top or him. Under ordinary circumstances there would have been no trouble; but there was a Fut Man's Ball in tbe lager ifceer saloon next door that day, and the two champion fit men trot over the fence, and sat down with a jerk on ton of Mr. Alexander Johnson s upper board without know tug he was there. It squelched the breath out of him at the first blow And the tat men, they sat and sat there, and discussed politics, and the Alabama claims, and the weather, and women's rights, and the glacial theory, nnd metaphysics; and they kept ou drinking glass after glass of beer, and getting heavier nnd heaver, until one of them happened to look under the board, and there was Alexander John son, as dead as Nebuchadnczzor, nnd mushed out so thin that you could puss him in under a closed door with out scraping hi vest-buttons. He does not sufTor from bile now.but Mrs. John son is roaming around over the couutry hunting fur Dr. Hall. She will pro bubly make a lasting impression, ou him if she meets him. A friend of ours (Burnside) some time ego bought an clurm-clock wilb which to awaken hi. hired girls in tho moruing. He set it down under the sotn, without mentioning the fact to his wife, and that evening after tea Mrs. Burntide reposed upon tho sofa with the baby upon her lap. Budt'en ly the alarm began with a terrific clat ter, which gave Mrs. Burnside such a dreadful shock that she fainted, drop ped the buby on its head, scared Bum side so thut he upset the kerosene lump on his mother-in law, who fell, knock ing young William Burnside through the glass door of the book-case.cutting him dreadfully; while Mary Jane Burnside, in eudcavoring to save the buby from the flames which were de. vouring the mother in-law, tore twelve yards of gathers out of her dress and tripped, breaking her right arm. It cost over twelve hundred dollars for doctors' to bring Mrs. Biirnaide out of her convulsions, to repair Mary Jane's arm, to cover William with sticking plaster, to heal up Burnside's mother-in-law. aud to trepan tho buby; to say nothing of the agony endured by Bunifcide from the lectures delivered ever since, three limes a duv, by his wife and wife's mother, upon the gen crai brutality ot niau, and the utter imbecility of all male cit'zens bearing me name oi liurusiue. lie wishes now he had alluded to that alarm-clock when he first came home, ot had en gaged a policeman to wake the hired girl by throwing bricks thn.ugh her WIUUOW. , Brown and Jones were at Cape May I -st summer, staying at the same hotel and occupying communicating rooms. Uue day Brown fixed a string to the covers on Joues bed aud ran the cord through the door iuto his own room. His purpose was to jerk the covers off as soon as Jones got comfortably fixed fur the night. But that afternoon Brigadier-General Muffin came down, and as the hotel was crowded, the landlord put Jones in the room with iirown. aud gave Joues apartment to the Geueral. Brown forgot about the string, and tie and Joues went to bed About inidulght Joues' dog while prowling around the room got the string taugled about hig Jog, and in struggling to reaou tha wiuduw be slowly dragged the bed-clothes off the brigadier next door. That eeutleman awoke, aud after howling at his wife for removing the blankets, went to sleep again. Presently Jones' dotr saw a rat auu uarteti lor it. Ult came the covers again. Then the man of war was mad. He roused his wifa and scolded her vigorously. She protested her innocence, and while she was speaking, Jones' dog heard another dug ouWe, and burned to tho win dow to bark, The povers wero again rcujovad, Then the briuadier fumbled about until he foud tlm cord. Tl'cu ho Juadetl up hi revolvers, drew his sword, and tlaied Joues and Browu to npcu that door and come out into the eutry. Tlipy peeped at )iin over the transom, observed his warlike i. repa rations, glanced at the .W'iu? aud the dog, packed their carpet-bags, slid down the water-snout outside, aud weut hume in tbe tiro o'clock train. The maunerin u hieb that battle-star red veteran roared around tlie LoUd during tha day was said to have beeu frightful; arul when rumors came that Iirown and Jones hail gone to another pluoe in tho neighborhood, ho spent the Lay trying to biro a buvtiuer with I' I'. V.I CA $2 PKH ANNUM. which to annihilate them. He is calmer now, but Brown and Jones will not visit Gape May this scasou until the General leaves. FAR vlIXO Al FAHMKRM rKO!rit'T BY A UKOKOIAN OWERVKK. Mr. Samuel A. Echols, of Georgia, who ha spent some time in Nebraska, fin which State the Burlington and Missouri River Railroad Company has considerable land for sale,) and who proposes to 1 oca to in the State, des cribes farming and farm prospects in Nebraska, in a letter printed in the Atlanta (Ga.) Herald. His observa tion ore worth readiug. Mr. Echols says: V . The most level and highly cultivated garden in our State (Georgia,) is in no better condition for cultivation than millions of acres in Nebraska, after the first, or sod plowing. The eoil is of a rich alluvial character, dark col ored, easily worked, of greet ttapth unu oi iiicxuausiioie tenuity. There is no need or commercial fertilizers to stimulate it to productiveness, nor doses of costly chemicals to supply "jdant food" for corn, wheat or grasses. The cost of cultivating is light. The plowing of com is usually done with two-horse sulky cultivators, with which one man and team can plow from six to eight acres pel tiny. One haud can, and does, oullivato from fifty to sixty acrts in corn which will yield ou al most any laud here, frum thirty to fif ty bushels per acre. Instances are numerous where tiighty bushels per acre are made. Corn and small grain are, as a rule, seeded, and the latter harvested, by . machinery. Wheu n farmer is unable to buy acorn planter, grain drill, cultivator or reaper, he will, perhaps, find one or more new settlers in the same fix, and the two or more clubbing together purchase the machiue, and all have the use of it until each is able to buy for him self. . A vory little while is required for any farmer to bo inilenundeut who will only attend to his business. He raises at ho.ne his corn, oats, wheat, barley, rye, hay, cattle, hogs, turkeys, chick ens, butter, eggs, fruit and vegetables. His expenses ure light. It costs com paratively little to feed his live stock, us they can graze upon the farm the greater part of the year, aud tho ! la bor is the only cost of saving, in Sum mer, an ample supply of as fine hav ns grows anywhere, for Winter feeding. I visited a farm on which the owuerot it, with a ysung sou and one hired man, cultivated last venr. one bun- dred and twenty acres in corn and one hundred in wheat, besides taking care of one hundred head of cattle. The. surplus of the corn and' wheat crop was marketed, and petted tlio farmer more than ?3,000. :.. It is pleasant to go among the farm ers and note thier conteutmeut and tbriftiness. There are men comforta bly situated upon farms of their own, and out of debt, who three -or four years since-came to the State with ab solutely no means whatever, Such men had to "rough it" for tho first year or two ; but there are hundreds of just such instances, and will be many more. Still I would not udvise any one to come to Nebraska to farm with than less $500. This is sum cient to give any industrious man bold upon eighty or one hundred and sixty acres of land, room to live in and gome sort of a team to work with Hut a man coming to Nebraska with , rti ,i ..... . ... ct.wu neea Know very mile hardshitis ; and any one with much over that amount w ith no hardships at all. BK.N MM.NNKK'M VA('ATiO.. If there is a thincr which at first thought I would be glad of, and am I 1 4 I .. ... . uuw ureauiut sorry lor. it la because school is out for keepi till the next term, it is most unusually tho wav lu-it wiiuu Bcnooi aou l ketn hcu school don't keep there is plenty of work studied up lor have to do. That's the way it me to ay it uts me every time. It's my kind of bad luck to be raised to have industrious wins. ftly father is everlastiuclv tellintr me idleness is the parent of vice or sumo ot that sort of disabled Eii'rIUh lan guage that I don't want to Lear, and mat i must keep busy at work at something, aud uot cud about with other indolent boys and race the streets rum moruing tut night perpetual. Last acatiou they put me into the garden, where they said I could ob tuiu some habits that would do ma guod when I became growu up iuto a useful citizeu. Well, to have to be a useful citizen is all very fine bilk, but if I could only have mr own wav on ly just puxe I would rather bo a pea uut boy on tlie railroad. But tliev have got bid Ui the same hardship whan l was ibto J ait summer, only it is rougher because there is more of it. If they think it's proper tor me to have to bug the potatoes, aud weed tlie union, aud roobarb, aud raie up 1 . Itato8 of Advertising. due Square ( I inch,) one inertion ft Wl KncSipiare " one monlh ' . .1 One Nniiare three month . on "ne Npiarn " one year - 10 I Two Niiinrea, one year - ' - - l; 0i iuirtcrCol. ' . . an On Half , .. . . ... o no One " . . . . 190 10 Ip' notice at etn1ilihcd rate. ' Mnrrinjfe nnd death notice, xratlx. All IiHIn fhr vnerlv adverlinonicnta col lected qimrterly. Teniorarv advorlise iiKiiu muHl lie aitl for in advance Job work. Cauli on Dcliveiv. - -... a lot of garden trash for to go fo eed and waste, why then I suppo-e it's all right if I could only see it, but when a boy has studied diligent all winter I don't think it's exae'ly the fair thing to keep him too tenacious at work in vacation. Anyhow, that's my opinion, which I throw in. There ain't a very great deal of real pleasure in hugging Potatoes where the bugs is about a barrel full to the acre, and when a boy has to bend his back down to pull uii weeds whijh grow clean through and cltnrh on the other side, it's a kiud of a niisrr&ble occupation which I would like to get half a good chance to slip out of. To have to wade into the garden early when the dew is on in your bare feet, and get- smart weed up your trousers leg, is a worse thing than the Erie &iphilis, and the fever and ague; but when you have to do it there is no use for to try to shirk out. I went back on the job once, but I never want back on it twice, because once was enough. I was roped in and coaxed by some bnys to gii oft" on tho commons to play ball for a whole day. Late in the evening, when I came in home the back way, and desperate hungry, the governor gave me nn abundance of stars and stripes, which I have got them yet, and could show 'em if I was only in a swimming. I found out that it is a bad habit for a boy (a get into, to shake his work without permission, and it's the best way always to obey orders if it almost breaks your back. But I have got awfuj sick; of this vacation busincw, and if I can find a school next year which will keep in the year round, it's the on that I want to go to, That'll what kind of a hairpin I ani. Rules for the Forest County Repub lican Primary Election. 1. . The candidates for the several offices shall have their names an nounced iu one or more of the county papers at least three weeks previous to the Primary Meetings, stating the office, nnd subject to the acticq of the party at the said primary meetings. - 2. The voters belonging to the lla. publican party iu each township or . borough, shall meet on a day to be designated by the County Committee, at the usual place of holding spring olectiomi, at 2 o'clock, P. M., and pro. eeed to elect one person for Judgc.aud two per.ons for Clerk, whe shall form a Board of Election to 'receive votes nnd determine who are tho proper per sons to vote, and who shall hold the polls open until 6 o'clock P. M. Af ter the polls are opened, the candidate announced shall be ballotted or; IU name of each person vot ing shall bo written on a list at the timp of voting, no person being allowed to vote liioro than onoo for each office, ' 3. After the polls ar dosed 1 the board shall proceed to count the votes that cch candidate hns received, and make out the returns accordingly, to be certified by the Judge and attested by the Clerk. 4. The Judges (or one of the Clerks appointed Ly the Judge) of tbe respec tive election districts, shall meotattho Court House, in Tioneata, on the Tues day following the Primary Meetings at 2 o'clock P. M., having tlie returns and a list of voters, and the person having the highest number of votes for any office, shall U declared tha regular nominee of , tho Republican party. A. Any two or more persons having an equal number of votes for the tamo office the Judges shall proceed to bal lot for a choice, the person having the highest number to be the comince. G. The Retujn Judges shall be com. peteut to reject by a majority, the re turns from any district where there ia evidence of fraud, either in the returns or otherwise, and shall reject them where there is evidence of three or more persons voting at tut primary raeetitigs who are not Republicans. 7. The lvet-uru Judges lill appiout Conferees lUsprcsontatfve,, Senatorial ud Congressional whose acceptance of said appointment shall be a pledge to support the pcrsoo who may receive the largest uuiubox of votes cast for that office iu the county, 8. 'Hie Return Judges uiuv at iuv tixue change the utode aud uiuuucr of selecting caoJJdttU.' as they way b4 instructed by the peopj. at their pri mary meeting:, due uotica being giveu by the County Committee. V. Ihe Chairmau of tho Cuuutv Committee shall be required to issue a call in pursuance of the action of tha Couuly Committee.
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