Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 361, 11 February 1908 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIU3I AND SUX-TE LECiRAM, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11. 190S.
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Absolutely Pure The only baking powder made with Royal Grape Cream of Tartar llo Alum, No Limo Phosphate
f " (SOCIAL . .
j'( To Reach the Society Editor, Call Home Phone 1121, or Bell Phono 21.
Do you serve, afternoon tea? l"nJes.s you can answer yes to (his queslion, yon are sadly out this winter, as the custom of a live o'clock cup of tea Is being more than ever adapted. "Whether one likes or dislikes the beverage must rot be considered. Hut it 3s Indeed a very pretty custom, for Ihere is something in the "tete a tete" )er the daintily appointed tea table jhnt breaks the ice. without effort up4u the part of the hostess or the iniu'd quests. That the habit is gainSnj; is shown by the fact that it. is no jloiifier a mere social function. Even the men are taking to the cozy habit unid they drink it not alone in their nvn homes, but in the cafes and (dub fcooms. All sorts of novelties have .come in with the habit, such as sugar tongs of metal in the shape of an oys,er claw and lemon dishes of cut crystal, with removable silver openwork ims. With each of these dishes tromcs a. tiny silver fork with long silver pilings to lift the slices. The old fashioned tea ball has been exchanged lur a new pcrculator in the form of a gasket of open work silver, hung on a silver chain. A table-spoon of tea is i i t in the top, which is then closed ,ind the basket hung in the pot of hot water until the tea is brewed. Silver faudwich plates are also a convenience for the hostess. These are of (jHlid silver and elaborately decoratThe tea urn is being rapidly away with, bv the Russian samWl. t done ijovar which is a met a' jtibout two feet high. ' the urn is a small char-' metal urn standim? ruderneath -coal fire, which ' heats the water in the urn. The tea ; habit is gaining and is indeed a prett : custom. The North A Street Friends (hutch -will dve ;x basket supper Wednesday aiight, after which a little play will be given under the direction of Mrs. Yarrington Harm's entitled "A Love of a Itonnel."' The following is the cast of characters: '.Mrs. Clipper (a widow ) Mrs. Marry Da 1 bey (her daughter) .Miss Agnes Twigg Hopkins ia 'little inquisitive) Mrs. llighiey Morris Dolan ( Irish help I Miss .lean Lupton Fast One, Miss Dora, d'ashionaneighbors) Miss Knby Clark.
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( Miss .Mildred tiaar. ne Mrs. Clipper's home. Yesterday was guest day for the 1 1eknor club ami about twenty members and twenty guests w re present. A musical program had been arrangECZEMA Itching or Psoriasis Use Blanchard's Eczema Lotion , Prices: 0-oz. bottle. $1; U'-oz. bottle. S. at CDNKKY-MOXMXC.KRS. -,Jlnst 1 net im and advice free. No red 'ntape. Describe our case, or ask me , m-tny questions on skin diseases, or for tliooklet. Ad.iress PROF. .). HLANC1I- . nRD. SKIN SFKCIALIST. ;'.M I Cotn,Tage Glove Avenue, Chicago. 111. T!" . J Roberson : At Earlhani
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"Land of the Incas." Last of the Scries. Don't fail to see it. 8:15 P. M.
'k Si NEWS - 'a a & i a ed for and the following upper grad utiles ot Karl Ham took part. Miss Stanlev gave several instrumental ri ii m ht.r: find Miv Hollnwell nlVP eral vocal numbers accompanied by Miss Faint. Miss Calvert was the reader and gave some beautiful selections which were inucii appreciated. Mrs. William Earhart, accompanied by Mrs. Kdward Rape, gave a vocal number. Refreshments were nerved and a charming afternoon enjoyed by .ill present. The club will meet next Monday with Mrs. D. L-. Mather, .".'! North Twelfth street. st s st Mr. llrock Fagan gave a. dinner party Sunday evening at the Westeott Hotel. Miss Florence Corwin, Miss Etta Jones and Miss Bessie Jones were the guests. St St The following young men formed a dinner party at the Westeott hotel) Sunday evening: Charles MeClellan. j Carl Hollingsworth, Russel Worl, and Monroe Vorhees. . S Mrs. Homier who has been the guest of her daughter. Mrs. J. M. Wampler for a few days, has returned to her home in Cireensburg. , J This afternoon tit tv:o o'clock at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Ferguson. 115 South Fifteenth street in the i presence of about twenty-live guests, i occurred the wedding of Miss Alice Jessup and Mr. Daniel Hockett of Waynesville. Ohio. The beautiful and impressive Friends ceremony was used. Rev. II. R. Smith of the First Baptist church being the officiating minister. The room where the ceremony was performed was beautiful in its appointments of pink and green, large bowls of pink roses adorning the mantel. An altar was formed of ferns intermingled with pink rose buds. The bride wore a hand embroidered gown of white. The bridesmaid was Miss Charlotte Tyson of Dayton. Ohio, and the best man. Mr. Guy Johnson of Converse. Indiana. Immediately after the ceremony Mr. and Mrs. Hockett left for their future home at Waynesville. Ohio. The bride wore a gray broadcloth traveling suit with hat and gloves to match, .vmong the out. of town guests were Miss Lela Young of Xenia, Ohio. Miss Charlotte Tyson. Dayton. Ohio, and Mr. titty Johnson of Converse. Indiana. . Miss Klsie Stanley and Miss Rose Drinker are making preparations for a 'Teap Year" dance to be given Monday. February twenty-fourth in the 1. O. O. F. hall. About twenty-five couples are invited and a buffet luncheon will be served. Music will be furnished by Miss Elsie Stanley and Mr. William Wilson. t The social by the B. P. session held last night O. E.'s in the club room was well attended, served and election i eived. Luncheon was returns were reThe Missionary water quartcrlv society of the Whitemeeting, will meet Wednesday. February twelfth at twothirty o'c!o( k. at t lie home of M i s Central avenue. P. Truchlood. ; The Spring Grove Sewing it e h 1meetinK ttiis afternoon with the Mis--! c Evans in Spring Grove. S - I Mr. Ed Fisher has returned from Eaton. Ohio, where he was the guest ) of his parents, j S . I The Magazine club met yesterday ! afternoon with Mrs. W. H. Ronu y. I "24 South Twelfth street. Mrs. F A '; Brown ami Mrs. Yarrington Barnes I were the readers for the club. Luneheon was served. The organization will 'meet nrM Monday afternoon with Mrs. i Erie Reynolds. l::i.". East Main street. ,t . i The TvU'oiiam Literary society met : last night at the First English I.urhrati church. Miss hla Mecr gave ; on "'Uet h'" which wns wo j paper .Hed. "Schili.r and his Hallnds" ti .po 1-y M'.-'S Knitna Knselbrecht
After the program a business session
followed. The society will meet again next monui. 0 The meeting of the Musical Study club this morning was postponed until the evening meeting which will be held Tuesday, February twenty-fifth. Miss Jessie Becler and .Mts Margaret Sedgwick, have returned from Indianapolis, where they were the house guests of Miss Edna Trutblood of that place. s st st Raymond Nicholson arrived this afternoon to attend the banquet given tonight in the Rcid Memorial church in honor of his grandfather. Mr. Timothy Nicholson. He will be the guest of his parents. Mr. and Mrs. John Nicholson, of East Main street. st s Mrs. .1. M. Wampler and sou Bonner, left this noon for Greeusburg. Indiana, wherf they will attend a reunion. s st sJt The Martha Washington society wi!! meet tomorrow afternoon with Mrs. Mink, of South Fourth street.. st st st The Criterion Literary society met jesterday afternoon with Mrs. Fred Towers of North C street. Roll call was responded to by quotations, after which the subject. "Writers of the Present. Day." was discussed by the ni' tubers. The hostess also gave a reading which was very good. The following committee was appointed to make arrangements for the next meeting. Mrs. Charles Ford. Mrs. W. 0. Wissler. and Mrs. P. R. Jessup. This meeting will he held the twentyfourth of February, at the home of Mrs. Charles Ford, of North Twentyfirst street, and a program will be given in honor of Washington's birthday. A luncheon will be served. Si Si st The Woman's Home and Foreign missionary society of the First English Lutheran church, will meet tomorrow afternoon at two-thirty o'clock with Mrs. Van Zant, on North Tenth street. It will be mite box day. st st si The Penny ciub will meet tomorrow afternoon with Mrs. John Mitchell, -1:: South Twelfth street. No flower With this could at nil compare, pretty lass so young and fair; Her step is light, her heart is Since taking Rocky Mountain A. CI. Luken tree, Tea. & Co. TARPOM TACTICS. Wonderful Feats, Flights and Leaps of the Silver King. In the big pass tarpon can best be caught from near th bottom of the channel and should be fished for with fifty feet of lino and a heavy sinker. Iu shallow water the tarpon leaps high in air the instant he feels the hook, but In the pass he often fights for a minute or two before coming to the surface. More than once when I had eome to fear that my tarpon was a shark he has suddenly shot above the surface like a bullet from a gun and in the first wild shake of his head thrown hook and bait fifty feet In the air, and one even sent a four ounce leaden sinker Hying over my head from nearly twice that distance. Other tarpon when struck came straight up from the bottom, one grazing our gunwale as he rose and another leaping over the stern of the canoe. As soon as a tarpon was tired enough to let us , pull the canoe beside him we removed the hook from his mouth and let him I swim home to his family. It happened once that a tarpon was less tired than we had assumed. On that occasion we swam home, and he had a good man story to tell his friends. j It had been counted a poor year for tarpon, yet in fifteen consecutive days of fishing we were fast to forty-four tarpon, each of which had jumped for us from one to twelve times. This high water mark of twelve jumps was made by a tarpon which was stimulated to his later efforts by the presence of a pursuing shark, and the twelfth jump was a double number. There was commotion in the crimsoned water, new vigor at the other end of my line, and it was an hour later when I finally landed on a sand bar a shark with an aldermanic stomach A knife drawn across this distended organ disclosed the tarpon in sections, with the hook still fast in his jaw. and enabled the camera man to photograph together the subjects he had recently photographed separately. Although this shnrk was only one-fifth the size of our big hammerhead, yet he made but two bites of his victim. Our work ot Boca Grande ended with the red letter day of the season of all seasons. I was fishing in the pass with fifty feet of line and the bait was directly under the canoe when a tarpon struck fiercely, quickly carried away a hundred more feet of line vand then swam so swiftly toward us that I feared from the loosened line that he had escaped. Then, fifty feet from the canoe, there shot into the air a giant tarpon, measuring, as we learned afterward, an even seven feet Up. up. up, he rose until the camera seemed to be pointed at the zenith, and before the rattled camera man could get his aim the sliver king had turned gracefully in the air and was plunging downward. The captain swears that he saw, swinging clear of the water, the ribbon which marked twenty-five feet on the line as it hung plumb down from the tarpon. Once I gave my own estimate of the height of the jump to a group of friends and after a glance at their grieved expressions appealed to the one of most experience on the coast ard with the tarpon. After a single moment of hesitation he remarked firmly: "We fishermen must stand together. 1 believe the story." A. W. DimocW in Appleton's. See the Cloak Bargains in our Show Window at $3.48. Come Thursday morning early and get your choice. Knollenberg's Store. it vou are trouDiea witn sick neaaacne. eon- i sanation, indigttn. fff?r?iv brea'h r m-r ! 1ifH-e arising 'rm stoma ;h troab!. zt a 5-V : rr I boi!- of Dr. l'i'iwf'1 Nyrur lpsm. 1 ' is positivciy guaranteed lo exue yoo.
IN A FALLING BALLOON
Fearful and Tragic Experience of Three Aeronauts. ONE SAVED AS BY A MIRACLE Th Terrifio Cold Sensations That Daring Voyagers Over Fiv Milesand the Peculiar Encompassed the at an Altitude of j I The Descent. One of the most terrific experiences in the history of ballooning was that of three aeronauts who in 1S75 made an ascension in a large and well made balloon, the Zenith. In this voyage the object was to reach the greatest possible altitude. The balloon rose to a height of 2S.000 feet that is, abont five and a half miles from the earth. At this point something happened what, no one will ever know, since th only surviving balloonist, Tissandler, was at the time insensible. But the balloon began a rapid fall and finally struck the ground with such a frightful shock that Slvel and Croce-Spin-nelll were killed instantly, while Tissandier's life was spared by a miracle. The account of this voyage is perhaps best told in Tissandier's own words: "At 25,000 feet we were standing up in the car. Sivel, who had given op. for a moment, was reinvlgorated. Croce-Spinnelll was motionless in front of me. 1 felt stupefied and frozen. I wished to put on my fur gloves. But without being conscious of it the action of taking them from my pocket necessitated an effort that I could no longer make. I copy verbatim the followiuj line3 which were written by me, although I have no very distinct remembrance of doing so. They are traced in a hardly legible manner by a hand trembling with cold: " "My hands aro frozen. I am all right. We are all right. Fog in the horizon, with little rounded cirrus. We are ascending. Croce pants, lie Inhales oxygen. Sivel closes his eyes. Croce also closes his eyes. Slvel throws out ballast' Sivel seized his knife and cut successively three cords, and the three bags emptied themfcelves, and we ascended rapidly. "When Slvel cut away the bags of ballast at the height of about 24.000 feet I seemed to remember that he was sitting at the bottom of the car and nearly In the same position as CroceSpinnelli. For my part. I was In the angle of the car, thanks to which support I was able to hold up, but I soon felt too weak even to turn my head to look at my companions. This was about 1:30 p. m. At 2:08 p. m. 1 awoke for a moment and found the balloon rapidly descending. I was able to cut away a bag of ballast to check the speed and wrote in my notebook the following words: " 'We are descending. Temperature, S degrees. I throw out ballast Barometer, 12.4 inches. We are descending. Sivel and Croce still in a faulting state at the bottom of the car. Descending very rapidly.' "Hardly had I written these lines when a kind of trembling seized me, and I fell back weakened again. There was a violent wind from below upward, denoting a very rapid descent After some minutes I felt myself shaken by the arm and recognized Croce, who had revived. 'Throw out ballast he said to me. 'We are dereending.' But I could hardly open j my eyes and did not see whether Slvel was awake. I called to mind that Croce unfastened the aspirator, which he then threw overboard, and be threw ( out ballast, rugs, etc. j "At 3:30 p. m. I opened my eyes I again. I felt dreadfully giddy and oppressed, but gradually came to myself. The balloon was descending with frightful sxeed and making great oecllI latlons. I crept along on my knees i and pulled Slvel aud Croce by the , arm. 'Slvel! Croce!' I exclaimed. ! 'Wake up!' My two companions were huddled up motionless In the car, covered by their cloaks. I collected all my strength and endeavored to raise them up. Sivel's face was black, his eyes dull, and his mouth was open and full of blood. Croce's eyes were half closed, and his mouth was bloody. "To relate what happened afterward is impossible. I felt a frightful wind. We were still 9.700 feet high. There remained in the car two bags of ballast, which I threw out I was drawing near the earth. I looked for my knife to cut the small rope which held the anchor, but could not find it I was like a madman and continued to call. 'Sivel, Sivel!' By good fortune I was able to put my band upon my knife and detach the anchor at the right moment "The shock on coming to the ground was dreadful. The balloon seemed as if it was being flattened. I thought It was going to remain where It had fallen, but the wind was high, and It was dragged across fields. The bodies of my unfortunate friends were shaken about In the car. and I thought every moment they would be jerked out. At length, however, I seized the valve line, and the gas soon escaped from the balloon, which lodged against a tree. It was then 4 o'clock. On step- ; ping out I was seized with a feverish j attack and sank down and thought for 1 a moment that I was going to join my i friends In the next world, but I came to. I founn the bodies of my friends ' co'd and stiff. I had them put under shelter In an adjacent barn. The de scent of the Zenith took place on the plains loo miles from Paris as the crow flies. The greatest height attained in this ascent is estimated at 2S.000 feet."-W. R. C. Latson In Mianeapolis Journal. KNIGHTS AND LADIES HONOR. OF It is urgently requested that all members f the lodge be presont at the r-gaiar nivtins- Wednesday evening. IVt. i. iy. as iLf-rt- v.i btts'nt.--s f ! in penance. alo the S; ;r i prise Committee will give r.n -nc jtainnieiit and valentine social. t iS7k; !aui a.:ri-: l-P'ii
ALL DAY WEDNESDAY WE OFFER YOU A 10c UNBLEACH MUSLIM THE BEST IN RICHMOND AT
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Don't fail to be here Wednesday. Sale Mill Ends. "THE PEOPLE'S
Bell Phone 234 R. GAVISKS REPORT ENDS TERRELL CASE Very Probable That There Will Be No Further Development. THE MATTER IS ENDED. DR. S EN E. SMITH OF EASTHAVHAS SAID SO SON AND DAUGHTER VISITED THE INSANE MURDERER. It is not expected there will he any further development in reference to the case of John Y. Terrell, the insane murderer of Melvin Wolfe, his son-in- j law, in Wells county, five years ago. The report of Father (iavisk. of the State Hoard of charities, which was a full statement in regard to the case of Terrel, declaring him to be insane, is believed to put. the matter at an end. The ss.on and daughter of Terrell recently visited Easthaven and were allowed to eo their father, hut no statement in reference to their visit has been available. Dr. i5. E. Smith, medical superintendent of Eusthaven, when approached on this Mibect, doclined to make an ystatement. saying the report of Father Gavisk had ended the matter. When "Drammor." Com. Easy. At the riayers' club in New York one evening there was a jfuest from out of town, a playwright well known for hla extraordinary facility In turning out the alleged "ilrauimers" that do the "ten-twentv-thirt" circuits. It is no uncommon thing for this producer to grind out five or six of his plays annually. Borne one innocently asked the playwright If it was rather difficult to find new Ideas for his plays. "Really I don't know." was the frank anewer of the man who has made thousands of dollars from his "drarnmers." "I have never tried It" New Vorli Tribune. Wooden Almanac. An antiquary In Chicago took a curiously engraved block of wood from a case. "Here Is an original almanac, a Saxon one." he said. "The engraved figures on it all concern the moon. They forecast the new moons and full moons and lunar change for the year; hence, being devoted to lunar matters, the Saxon block was called an al-mon-heed,' or 'observation of all the moons.' "From al-rnon-heed our word almanac comes." Unuvil Result. "Well." rskeJ the motorman. vou ni ana re to collect your little "did bill from that conductor?" "No.'' answered the disgusted pas senger. "I got tired trying to collect it at his house, and the other day 1 caught him on his car." "What did be do?" "The tame thing a3 usual put me off." Rsai Geniu. That artist is a real genius." remarked the admirer. "So" answvred Miss Cayenne: "he can't r? a real genius, or people wouldn't 'be saybir so many complimentary thinp about him befor he Is dead." Washington Star. Superstitious Golfers. The two chief golfing superstitions are that two up and five to play never won a match and that it is unlucky to win the first hole. It is Lard to say which 1? the si ller of the tww London Md!'. One othT He rout be thatched with int it wiM svn rain through.
We Stand Ready to Show You WEDNESDAY The Best MUSLIN VALUE To be found in Richmond
The Last Week -OFGREAT SALE Mill Ends. Mill End Calico Best Goods 5c Corner HISLAST APPEARANCE Frank R. Roberson Will Deliver Last Travel Lecture at Earlham Tonight. ADDRESSES PROFITABLE. Wednesday night, at Kurlham college. Dr. Frank It. Koberson will give his final lecture. This scries of lectures has bet-u given for the benefit of the general fund o fine Athletic ubsotiation and the promise is that It will profit to a considerable extent. The final lecture will be on "The Lund of the Incas." in which he will cover I'ru. Uolivia nd I-ake Titicaca; historic Lima, the city of the Three KingH, i with the corpse of Fizarro and memo ries o ft he inquisition; her fourscore churches, with their broken minarets, crumbling istone. fading colors and hideous images; her arcades and ttreets of balconies: the Cordilleras, the mighty spinal column of South America; Arequlpa. the second city of Peru, i'.nd the tour over the Cordilleras to Lake Titicaca, one of whose islands was the Eden of the lncas. the birthplace of their prehistoric, empire, whose civilization has been the wonder and mysteries of centuries. disco, the Inca capital, the most important city in America 4 years ago, now the heart of all that is most interesting in Peru, in ruins, will be described. La Plaz, the capital of Bolivia is on 40 hills with stairway streets a panorama o fred. blue, orange and white roofs. The queerest, quaintest capital in South America in the very heart of the Andes, are to be dealt with. THE CITY IN BRIEF TUESDAY NIGHT EVENTS. Vaudeville at the Phillips. Timothy Nicholson Banquet. Coeur do Lion lodge, K. of P Revival services at Grace church. meets. M. II. Deaths and Funerals. lU'RDEN Walter Burden, aged 2", years died Monday at the home of his ani!, Mrs. Benjamin Smith. on? milo eotitii of Boston. The funeral will take place Thursday morning. Interment in the New Paris eemeterv. RAFTER Mary Rafter died ' Monday at her home 25 South Seventeenth street. Funeral will be Wednesday at 9 o'clock at St. Mary's ciiurch ami will be private. Interment in St. M.-try's cemetery. Clip This Recipe. Excellent Tb f E rt ivcnf ss of the fimDif rec ipe given bHow ill prov a pifHf-iim Mirpri.-: to ;h').-p s bo a cough ii ,---tn to ;omre every occasion, and pend rors--idcrabie money lerable money iu "radymade" cough syrups. A full pint i.s easily made at home in Eve minutes, at silent expense. It i- remarkably pronip in l:---;tling the infinite.! membranes v.v.iy t-topjdng a cieep-s-.e-.s.teI oiigh in I hour.-. It is also exeeHcnt for .-ore or weak lungr;, whooping cough, bronchial troubles and ether throat affections. Take three-quarters of a pound of Granulated sugar, add watf-r. l.at and stir until you have a thick syrup. Put 2'loi. of Pir.r-x in a pint bottle, then fill it up with the Granulated Snear Syrup, and shake well. Keep wM i-orked and it will never -poii. , ;iUf a tea.-f.oor. ful ev ery
ALL DAY WEDNESDAY WE OFFER YOU A 7c MUSLIN UNBLEACH FINE QUALITY THE BEST IN RICHMOND 5c yd
Last week STOGIE 99 9th and Main Sts. WEAPONS WERE USED Said That Knife and Knucks Were Used in Engagement Over Dog. TRIAL THIS AFTERNOON. The case in which Kdward Drown, Charles and Horschel Stanley are principals, aud which gruv. out of some trouble over a dog, was to come to trial in the city court at 11 o'clock this afternoon. Charles Stanley in charged with assault and iltrschel Stanley with drawing a weapon, it being alleged that he drew a knife on lirown. It is also claimed that both the Stanleys ware knucks, at the time they went to the railroad yards in search of Brown, who ia an employe o fthe Pennsylvania railroad company. Brown lost a don and found It in possession of ilerschel Stanley. When he went to claim tlie animal. Stanley refused to give it up and trouble ensued. Later, it ia claimed the two Stanleys minted Brown up and more trouble ensued and It appears that Brown had the best of the encounter. Just what the facts In the case really are remains to be untangled at the hearing of the case this afternoon. A number of witnesses were in court this morning, but owing to the absence of the prosecutor, incident to his being up late to get electiou returns .there was a postponement. HEAVY TRAIN WENT It Carried Merchants and Buyers. One of the heaviest trains that has passed through Richmond in recent months was the Pennsylvania limited of last Sunday, which was In two sections, carrying the merchants and novel s from St. Iyjuis. Terre Haute. Indianapolis and liiMilsvIM to New York on their annual buying -xpeditlon. Thro are many nunint and interesting old mruiMoni in 'ioriiaui. Me.. Lul none of then can claim the distinction possessed by the Telford house, which was framed, raised and boarded all in one day. this wonderful building stun I taking place oa the Fourth of July, 12.". It Makes a Pint of Cough Syrup. oLe. two or three hours.'' The tat-te t very aercrable a t'ature which coutuuic it to children viho rel-l aaiuft most forms of niedie ine. Plnex, as you probably know, is the nwst concentrated form of Norway White Pine Extract. It is rich in gualacol and other elements which make the ozone of the pine forests so effective curirg: consumption. None ef the many pine oil or pine tar prepartion ar to b ejmpared with the real Pinex itself. Most druggists baTe it or can easily get It for a customer if requested. The 24 oz. of Pinex should cost you about City cents, and the Granulated Suar about four cents. Total cost. 54 rects for a full pint of the mixture neugh to- last ihe wbol family a lorgr tim. ('u out this reipe and pat it in your Frap book.
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