Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 29 October 1895 — Page 4

sr.

By I. ZANGWILL.

^Copyright, 1895, by the Author.] I'lio moment came near for the Polish •centenarian {grandmother to die. From •the doctor's statement it appeared she v,.. ,»• uad quarter uf an iiuur to

live. Her attack had been sudden, and the grandchildren she loved to scold could not be present.

Sho had already battled through the great wave of pain and was drifting beyond the boundaries of her earthly refuge. The nurses, forgetting the trouble her querulousness and overweening dietary scruples had cost them, hung over the bed in which the shriveled entity lay. They did not lrnow that sho •was living again through the one great episode of her life.

Nearly 40 years back, when, though already hard upon 70, and a widow, a Polish village was all her horizon, sha received a loiter. It arrived on the eve of '"ath, on a day of rainy summc". Itwa* from her little boy—her only boy —who kept a country inn 3? miles away and had a family. She opened the letter with feverish anxiety. Her son— Jier kaddish—was tho apple of her eye. The grandmother eagerly perused tho Hebrew srript, from right to left. Then weakness overcame her, and she nearly fell.

Embedded casually enough in the four pages was a passage that stood out for her in letters of blood: "I am not feeling very well lately. The weather is so oppressive, and the nights are misty. But it is nothing serious. My digestion is a little out of order, that's all." Thore SVL-IU ir.Mes for her in the letter, but she let them fall to the floor unheeded. Panic, fear, traveling quicker 4,him the tardy post of those days, had brought rumor of a sudden outbreak of cholera in her son's district. Already alarm for her boy had surged about her lieart all day. The letter confirmed her worst apprehensions. Even if the first touch of the cholera fiend was not actually on him whey he wrote, still he was, by his t.wn confession, in that condition in which the disease takes easiest grip. By this time he was on a bed of sickness—nay, perhaps on his deathbed, if not dead. Even in those days the little grandmother had lived beyond the common span. She had seen many people die, and knew that the angel of -deatli does not go about his work leijaurely. In an epidemic his hands are too full to enable him to devote much attention to each case. Maternal instinct togged at her heartstrings, drawing her toward her boy. The end of the letter seemed impregnated with special omen: "Come and see me soon, dear little mother.

I

shall be unable to get to you

for some time." Yes, she must go at once, who knew but that it would be the last time she would look upon his face?

But then came a terrible thought to give her The Sabbath was just "in" a lr.oment ago. Driving, riding, or any maimer of journeying was prohibited during the next 24 hours. Frantically she reviewed the situation. Religion permitted the violation of the Sabbath on one condition—if life was -to bo saved. By no stretch of logic could alie delude herself into the belief that lier son's recovery hinged upon her presence. Nay, analyzing the case with the cruel roniorselessness of a Fcrupnlous conscience, she saw his very illness was only a plausible hypothesis. No. To go to him now were beyond question to profane the Sabbath.

And yet, beneath all the reasoning, Jier conviction that he was sick unto death, her resolve to set out at once never wavered. After an agonizing struggle sho compromised. She could not go by cart. That would be to make others work into the bargain, and would, moreover, involve a financial transaction. She must walk! Sinful as it was to transgress the limit of 2,000 yards beyond her village, the distance fixed by rabbinical law, there was no help for it. And of all the forma of traveling walk-

"Th.c little mother is on the way ang was surely tho least sinful. The Holy One, blessed be he, would know sho did not mean to work. Perhaps in his mercy he would make allowance for an old woman who had never profaned *a»is rest day before.

And so that very evening, having oiiado a hasty ieal and lodged the previous letter in her bosom, tho little tigrandmother girded up her loins to walk the seven and thirty miles. No staff took she witli her, for to carry such came under tho Talmndical definition of "work." Neither could she carry an annbrella, though it was a season of xain. Mile after mile she strode briskly toward the pallid face which lay so far beyond the horizon and yet ever shone farfore her eyes like a guiding star. "I jun coming, my lamb," she muttered. "The little mother is on the way.

Jt was a muggy night. The sky, flushed with a weird hectic glamour, seemed to bang over the earth like a pall. The £ms that lined the roadway were .ihrouded in a draggling vapor. At mid­

night the mist blotted out the stars. But the little grandmother knew the road ran straight. All night she walked through the forest, fearless as Una, meeting neither man nor beast, though the woif olid ihe berr h»r»nted its recesses and wiii'nic he bushes. But only the innocent squirrels davted across her path. The mo'vii-irr found her spent and almost lame. »*ir »-he wn'ked on. tje journey was yet to do.

She had nothing with her to eat. Food, too, was an illegal burden, nor could she buy any on the holy day. She said her Sabbath morning prayer walking, hoping God would forgive the disrespect. The recital gave her partial oblivion of her pains. As she passed through a village the dreadful rumor of cholera was confirmed. It gave wings to her feet for ten minutes. Then bodily weakness was stronger than everything else, and she had to lean against the bushes on the outskirts of the village. It was nearly noon. A passing beggar gave her a piece of bread. Fortunately it was unbuttered, so she could eat it with only minqr qualms, lost it had touched any unclean thing. She resumed her journey, but the rest had only made her feet move painfully and reluctantly. She would have liked to bathe them in a brook, but that, too, was forbidden. She took the letter from her bosom and reperused it and whipped up her flagging strength with a cry of, "Courage, my lamb the little mother is on the way.'' Then the leaden clouds melted into sharp lines of rain, which beat into her face, refreshing her for the first few minutes, but soon wetting her to the skin, making her sopped garments a heavier burden, and reducing tho pathway to mud that clogged still further her feeble footsteps. In the teeth of the wind and the driving shower she limped on. A fresh anxiety consumed her now—would she have strength to hold out? Every moment her pace lessened. She was moving like a snail. And the slower she went the more vivid grew her prescience of what, awaited her at the journey's end. Would she even hear his dying word? Perhaps terrible thought—she would only be in time to look upon his dead face! Perhaps that was how God would punish her for her desecration of the holy day. "Take heart, my lamb," she wailed. "Do not die yet. The little mother comes.

The rain stopped. The sun came out hot and fierce and dried her hands and face, then made them stream again with perspiration. Every inoh won was torture now, but the brave feet toiled on. Bruised and swollen and crippled, they toiled on. There was a dying voice— very far off yet, alas—that called to her, and as sho dragged herself along she cried: "lam coming, my lamb. Take heart! Tho little mother is on the way. Courage! I shall look upon thy face. I shall find thee alive!"

Once a wagoner observed her plight and offered her a lift, but she shook her head steadfastly. The endless afternoon wore on. Sho crawled along the forest way, stumbling every now and then from sheer faintness and tearing her hands and face in tho brambles of the roadside. At last the cruel sun waned, and reeking mists rose from the forest pools. And still the long miles stretched away, and still she plodded on, torpid from overexertion, scarcely conscious, taking each step only because sho had taken the preceding. From time to time her lips mumbled, "Take heart, my lamb I am coming. The Sabbath was "out" ere, broken and bleeding, and all but swooning, the little grandmother crawled up to her son's inn, on the border of the forest. Her heart was cold with fatal forebodings. There was none of the usual Saturday night litter of Polish peasantry about the door. The sound of many voices, weirdly intonating a Hebrew hymn, floated out into the night. A man in a caftan opened the door and mysteriously raised his forefinger to bid her enter without noise. The little grandmother saw into the room behind. Her daughter-in-law and her grandchildren were seated on the floor—the seat of mourners.

Blessed bo tho true Jadge,'' she said, and rent the skirt of her dress. "When did he die?"

Yesterday. We had to bury him hastily ere the Sabbath came in." The little grandmother lifted up her quavering voice and joined the hymn: "I wTill sing a new song unto thee, O God! Upon a harp of ten strings will I sing praises unto thee.

The nurses could not understand what sudden inflow of strength and impulse raised the mummified figure into a sitting posture. The little grandmother thrust a shriveled claw into her peaked, shrunken bosom and drew out a paper, crumpled and yellow as herself, covered with strange, crabbed hieroglyphics, whose hue had long since faded. She held it close to her bleared eyes. A beautiful light came into them and illumined the million puckered face. The lips moved faintly. "I am coming, my lamb," she mumbled. "Courage! The little mother is on the way. I shall look on thy face. I shall find thee alive.

THE END.

••Mamma Is Here Now."

It was in the Pennsylvania station the other morning. In ono of the waiting room seats there sat a tired, worn looking man with a little boy of perhaps 3 in his arms. Tho little fellow's lihoes were only half buttoned, his hair Was awkwardly combed, and his stockings were awry. At tho man's side sat two little girls of perhaps 5 and 7. Their frocks were buttoned crooked, but tho younger had her hair combed in a pitiful attempt at curls. The man kept glancing at the clock. By and by the elder little girl spoke. "Is mamma here yet?" she asked. "Let us see," the man said.

The forlorn looking quartet rose and litraggled out to the platform. There some men were just lifting a long pine box from a wagon. The man looked at it a moment -vH "Come," he said,' "let's go back. Mamma is here now. "—-Washington Post.

HOLMES' TRIAL BEGUN

Sensational Developments JYiiii the First Day.

DFSEP^D BY EIS ATTORNEYS,

l'r?s«rr- v..« To j.t Oth«T

Counsel and Will Plead His Own Case. A Jury Secured, Itnt Jfo Evidence

Taken—District Attorney's Opening- Ad­

dress To the Jury.

PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 29. II. H. Holmes, or Herman Mudgett, which he says is his baptismal name, was put on trial in the court of oyer and terminer yesterday for the murder of Benjamin F. Pietzel, in this city, on Sept. 2, 1894, and the developments of the firtt day verified, better, perhaps than before, the force of the maxim that truth is stranger than fiction.

Long before 10 o'clock, the hour set lor the opening of court, an eager crowd thronged the corridors without. The regulations were soon complete4, however, that none but lawyers, witnesses, jurors ami newspaper representatives were permitted to pass the cordon of police which formed a barrier across the entrance to the particular corridor, leading to the courtroom, and the force of court officers, who guarded every entrance to the room. This prevented undue crowding, although every seat in the big room was occupied. The g*iera! public will be admitted to the caparity of the gallery, which will seat about 500, when the taking of the testimony is begun.

The day's proceedings began when Messrs. Shoemaker and Rotan moved for a 60 days' continuance on the ground of lately discovered evidence. This was promptly refused, as was also their motion for a continuance for one day. Finding the judge inexorable, they, as a last resort, declared that they would withdraw from the case. Judge Arnold notified them that if they did so they would lay themselves open to disbarment. Thereupon Holmes declared from the dock that under the circumstances he would not permit them to defend him. He therefore dismissed them from his service, and the lawyers left the room, in spite of the court's threats.

Judge Arnold then appointed E. M. Schofield and J. M. Fahy to assume charge of the defense, but again Holmes interposed. He declared that he would not place his life in the hands of two young men who knew the case only hearsay, and eventually when his personal entreaties for a postponement were refused, he declared that he would himself try th case. Meanwhile he expressed a desire to secure the services of Attorney 0. Moon, but that gentleman, after learning from the judge that he could n" obtain a continuance, declined to accept the grave responsibility.

The select of a jury consumed several hours, liolmes freely exercising his prerogative of challenge, and after '2 men had been secured, a recess was taken.

The afternoon session was devoted largely to District Attorney Graham's opening address to the jury, in which' he outlined the case in detail and subjected the prisone: a searching examination Holmes, hoAvever, was impertural1 and sat with his legs crossed, calmly taking notes.

At the conclusion of the address, Holmes accused Mr. Graham of trying to keep his wife from him, and of having intercep ed letters which he had written her. The woman, he meant, he said, was "she whom the district attorney saw fit t. designate as Miss Yoke."

He was granted permission to have light and writing material in his cell to aid him in the preparation of his defense, and t' write to the woman.

INSURANCE BY THE STATE.

Germany's Law About to lie Adopted by Other Nations.

WASHINGTON, Oct. 29.—United States Consul Germain at Zurich, Switzerland, has supplied the state department with an interesting report upon the operation of Germany's law for the insurance of laborers against sickness, accident and old age, which has now been in operation for 10 years. It appears that there has been paid on account of this insurance from the time the law went into effect $437,500,000, the government, the employers and the employes sharing the expense.

Mr. Germain mentions the fact that German industrials complain of the heavy tax involved in the payment of the insurance, but the report indicates that the nation is as a whole proud of the institution. The Germans are the pioneers in this class of insurance, but Austria has partially followed suit and Switzerland is now engaged in formulating a labor insurance law. Mr. Germain says that Sweden and Norway and Great Britain also contemplate the adoption the German system.

Cost of the Niearagnan Canal.

LONDON, Oct. 29.—The Times this morning has a three-column article on the Nicaraguan canal from a correspondent, lately there, who says that it is clear the project can not be carried through as a private undertaking, but that it must be under the auspices of some strong government, which without doubt must be the United States. He is convinced that the cost will be nearer £30,000,000 ($150,000,000) than £20,000,000 ($100,000,000). It is useless to suppose, he adds, that the Gulf states or Central America will be able to supply the nec( sary labor. The true source of labor, he thinks, will undoubtedly be the West Indies, negro labor being far superior to the Chinese.

A Contractor .Suicides.

ZANERVILLE, O., Oct. 29.—Alonzo G. Pletscht-T, a well known contractor, stood in front of a mirror at his homo, on Amelia street, yesterday, and deliberately shot himself, the bullet from the revolver entering the skull just behind the ear. He had been unfortunate in a business venture in Columbus and in this city and had been suffering from melancholia for some time. He was 4i years old and a wife and two cmldren survive him.

St,ea:n l! irf On a Kecf.

SHEBOYGAN,Wis., Oct. 29.—The steam barge Pentland, laden with iron ore, tvent on the reef oil' Ceiiterville last night. Two tugs have gone to her as distance.

Jin«l«*d

in a Draw.

NEW YORK, Oct. 29.—The Dixon3riffo fight was declared a draw in the *entli round. v:-

FLOATING CANNERY RETURNS.

Novel Cruise of the American Schooner Complete Success. NEW YORK, Oct. 29.—Loaded up to lier Cif-xl: oeams with cans full of green ij ]i) soup, pompano and guava jelly Uitl i/w'o-masted, 109-ton American schooner Gracie anchored in the upper bay last night after a cruise of six moatiis in West Indian

wr,ters.

A ooiiuus feature of this very curious cargo is that it was all manufactured on board the schooner and therefore is not supposed to be subject to duty. Therein lies the secret of the original expedition. It was planned by Benjamin Woods and his associates. They expect to undersell the importers,

When the Gracie T. left New York on April 10, last spring, she was fitted up as a floating cannery. A chef was taken along to overlook operations and the rest of the party consisted of six expert canners and the regular crew of the vessel. The vessel was fitted out at an East river pier. First an 8-horse power boiler was put on board, and then three copper caldrons of 25 gallons each. Machinists set the boiler up a little forward of amidships and pipes were run from this boiler to a big circular "process" kettle. Tho big kettle rested on the lower deck, and it projected half its length through a hole in the deck above, where the boiler was placed. After all the preparations were made truck loads of empty cans, 150,000 in all, were put.aboard, and the little vessel started.

Besides the turtle soup, guava jelly and pompano, the captain expected to secure and preserve several lands of fish and game. After leaving port little was heard of the vessel until she returned to New York last night. She has been cruising along the coast of Costa Rica and her crew for months have been engaged in capturing huge green turtles and converting them into soup and canning it. The meats, after being boiled down in the three copper caldrons, were also canned and then lowered into the big "process" kettle and subjected to a high boiling under steam pressure to make them keep. The chef looked after this and also superintended the manufacture of guava jellies.

CAPERS OF A CRANK.

Large Demands Made at Several Departments in Washington. WASHINGTON, Oct. 29.—C. B. Mangum, a middle-aged crank who claims to come from the state of Washington, called at the treasury department and the interstate commerce commission and presented claims for large sums against the government. At the former he demanded that Treasurer Morgan pay hiia $817,000,000 for loss of gold he said he" sustained by the sinking of the steamer Victoria.

At tho interstate commerce commission offices he reduced this claim to $100,000,000. He also called at the British embassy, but failed to see any one and threatened to see the president. He was taken into custody by the police.

Eijilit- Hour Day Next May. PiTTiSBURG, Oct. 29. Members of trade unions affiliated writh the federated metal trades are discussing the question of making a demand May 1, 1896, for an eight-hour work day. All over the United States during the next 30 days a vote wrill be taken in every union of machinists, molders, boilermakers and iron shipbuilders, tin and sheet iron workers, brass workers and blacksmiths, as to whether the recommendation of the federated metal trades convention favoring a general demand for eight hours shall bo endorsed.

TELEGRAPH TAPS.

Condensed SAWS by

Wire

From Diffarciifc

I'arts of t!iivlobs.

Destructive

-airie

fires are reported

near Perry. O. T. The reported death of King Menelek of Abyssinia is denied.

Milton Burgess fat ally shot Allen Johnson at Downiugsville, Ky. Burgess was lodged in jail.

At Williamstown, Ky., Thomas Kells, a drunken farmer, almost disemboweled Ed Stroud with a knife.

At Pierre, S. D., Mrs. Richard Smith and child were fatally burned by tke explosion of a kerosene lamp.

It is said that Mrs. Truxton Beale, who was Miss Hattie Blaine, has separated from her husband and will apply for a divorce.

At Wilmington, Del., Dave Greenage. 16, colored, was arrested for killing his grandmother, Harriet Lewis, for purposes of robbery.

Marion and several other townships of Franklin county, O., have decided to sue the city of Columbus for polluting the Scioto rivor.

Ira Hall, a young farmer near Springdale, Ind., shot himself through the body with a shotgun. No cause assigned. He will probably die.

Commander Pigman of the Bennington reports from there that there were three sporadic cases of cholera in Honolulu since Sept. 18. No cases since Oct. 3.

The Rev. Walter C. Clapp of Milwaulcwho about a year ago left the Episcopal church to become a Catholic, has, so he says, become convinced that he took a wron tand is .about to return to the Epibcinj..l church.

Indications,

Fair, cooler weather westerly winds.

THE MARKETS.

Review of the vain and Livestock Market* October JJS).

l'ii

tsbnrg.

Cattle—Prime, £4 S0@5 00 good, $4 30(01 4 60 good bucclu^.-', $3 80^ 00 bulls, stags and cows, $1 ."»0tai'S 50 rough fat, 50@3 50 fresh cows and springers, §15 (tf!40. Hogs Prime :lir. and medium weights, 05^4 10 common io fair, tiGCoiii 90 roughs, $3 50. ,SheepExport, §8 8i@3 00 extra., 80t8* 10 good, 40 fair, $1 40%~.l tK) eomlnon, SoocKiSl 00 spring lambs, 0U^fi4 10 I veal calvus, ii!4 "Jo.

Cincinnati.

Wlic'it—OM'-OO,1io. Corn—2i)WC/j il3e. Cattie- -looted binchers. $4 0!)v(!4 40 fair to medium, b5 common, $:i :25tS 3 00. Hogs—Selected and prime butchers, $3 60(t§ packing, 05(^3 75 common to rough, 25g!3 00. Sheep—$1 00@3 75. Lambs—7T(ti.4 00. «.

Chicago

Hogs—Selected butchers, $3 25@3 75 Packers, $3 30@3 65. Cattle Poor to choice steers, $3 15@5 25 others, $4 00@ 00 cows and bulls, #1 25@3 75. Sheep —fl 40 lambs, $2 75(ij!4 35.

New York.

Cattle—$1 25@o 25. Sheep—$1 25@3 25 axubs, $3 oO(S4 lio.

1895 OCTOBER. 1895

Su. Mo. Tii. We. Th. Fr. Sa.

2 3 4 5

1

6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31

Record.

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Philadelphia.

"BIG FOUR"

ROUTE: TO

ATLANTA.

Cotton^States and International Exposition.

Travelers to the South

From New York, Boston Buffalo, Cleveland, Columbus, Springfleld, Sandusky, Dayton and Intermediate points, magnificent through trains run daily into Cincinnati. All trains of the "Big Four" arrive at Central Union Station, Cincinnati, making direct connections with through trains of the Queen & Crescent routa to Atlanta. Through sleeping cars via the Q. & C. route run directly to Chattanooga, thence via Southern railway to Atlanta. Many points of historical interest as well as beautiful scenery may be eniycjd enroute. Of these Cbickamauga National Park and.Lookout Mountain at Chattanooga are foremost, and should be visited everyone on the way ta Atlanta.

For full information as to rates, routes, time ©f trains, etc., call on or address any agent Big Four Route.

Cheap Excursions to tho West. Bountiful harvests are reported fr®m all sections of the west and north-west, and an exceptionally favorable opportunity for home-seekers and those desiring a change ofj mention is offered by the iiu vL l"nf irtfc eJC'-ursions which hare been ^rrap'-ed by the North Western

LIi'tcKet,? for 'hfse excureic/*, with f„v.i !p

1"

©jd

duriDg

D. B. MARTIN,

Gon'l Pass. & Ticket Agt.

E. O. M'CORMICK, Pass. Traffic Algr. 41t3

A Vcllowhtone J'ark Trip

Will do more to over come that feeling ot lassitude or laziness which ever you prefer to call it than all the medicine in the apothecary's shop. Get out of the harness for a while take a lay off and ggo to the park and become renewed in body and mind. See the geysers play, hear thepaint pots pop, the cataracts roar, climb about the canyon walls, catch trout in the Yellowstone lake, take on a new life. Send Chas. S. Fee, General Passenger Agent, Nbrthern Pacific railroad, six cents for the new and Illustrated Touriet book.

itfccid on

August fcyth, September 10th and 24th to points in Northern Wisconsin and Michigan North-western Iowa, Western Minnesota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Colorado, Wyoming, Utah and a large number of other points. For full-information apply to agents of connecting lines, or address A. L. Waggoner, T. P. A. 7 Jackson Place, Indianapolis, Ind.

Kotkj Mountains.

Along the line of the Northern Pacific Railroad abound in large game. Moose, drer.^bear, elk, montaiu lions, eie., can jet bt found there. Tne true sportsman is wiilmg to go tiere s'or then A little bi.-o!. c.-tlicd

'*-ani:£d

A

Game Pu^trves,"

a N or a a i.uaii. *.vii be fen upon receipt of foul OIJUIS :n »tamps by Charles S. let. Gen'j

cent, St. Paul, Minn. 15tf

COTTON STATES Oi Oi lHOX.

At'a»ia, On. Sept.18.Dec 31,

The schedule printed below is f, compi~e\ & gu.de to the shortest and quickest route to Atlanta from the North and Northwest, Chicago, Indianapolis, Ttrt ijaiut auu Kvausviile,

Palace Day Coaches Ami Pullman Sleepin-. (':.! an: a'taco 't": l, bhown in this schedule.

F.xtrtm« I low rates hfvf bten made to Atlanta and return, via the Nashville, Chattanooga and St-Louis Baiiway. All trains run solid between Uashville and Atlanta. The train in last column, which leaves Cincinnati at 4:30 1'. M., runs so:iu to Atlanta. This is the route of the famous "Dixie Flyer" through "all the year round" sleeping car line between Nashville, Tenn., and Jacksonville, F'n.

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and the early part of the winter «eason will have an unusual opportunity of see ing the South at its best advantage. The Atlanta Exposition

is

the largest exposi

tion of its kind in this country, with the exception of the world's fair at Chicago.

HOW TO REACH ATLANTA.

From Chicago, Peoria, Indianapolis, Terre Haute, LaFayette, Benton Harbor and intermediate points, the North and Northwest, the "Big Four" route offers the choice of the two great gaitwajs to the South—Cincinnati and Louisville. Solid trains with parlor cars, magnificent sleeping cars and dining cars run daily from Chicago and Indianapolis to Ci»ci*nati »nd Louisville.

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For further information address Briard F. Hill, Northern Passenger Agent, 328 Marquette Building, Chicago, 111. R. C. Cowardin, Western Passenger Agent, 405 Ry. Exchange Building, St. Louis, Mo.: or D. J. Mullaney, Eastern Passenger Agent, 59 W. Fourth St., Cincinnati, O.

W. DANLEY,

(T. & T. A. Nashville, Tenn. 21-d&w-tf

$500.00 GUARANTEE:. ABSOLUTELY HARMLESS. Will not injure hands or fabric.

No Washboard no«do«.l, can us« hard watd same as soft. Full Directions on every package. AJ 8-oz. package for $ cts. or 6lor 25 cts.

Sold by retail grocer* everywhere.

("When tho Hrur Hnnrf Points to Nine, Have Your Washing on tho Line." «.

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