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A GOOD
CITIZEN

It
was at Pine Grove Furnace, the Register first met Mr. M. J. Cline,
and it was a mutual benefit, for through the long years he has
never ceased to read our paper, and we have never ceased to regard
him as our helper, and friend. He is now engaged in business for
himself where some of his sons took him, at the corner of Second
and Etna streets and he reports an abundance of work, in a general
line of blacksmithing and wagon making. We noticed that men having
horses with difficult or tender feet seem to know his place, and
want to stop to receive help from our friend and they go away
better satisfied to pull and to work when their feet are shod
right. Mr. Kline and family now live in our city and a nobler,
finer set of people never had their homes with us. The young men
and ladies of the family are noted for their intelligence and all
are good workers.
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