Semi-weekly Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 18 May 1897 — Page 3
WINTER SLEEP.
know it must be winter, thought Sleep— I know it must be winter, for I dream I dip my bare feet in the running stream. And flowers are many, and the grass grows deep.
I know I must be old (how age deceives!)— I know I must be old, for, all unseen.
My heart grows young, as autumn fields grow green, When late rains patter on the falling sheaves.
I know I must be tired (and tired souls
a...,
err)—
jfeil know I must be tired, for all my soul To deeds of daring beats a glad, faint roll,
As storms the riven pine to music stir.
I know I must be dying (death draws near)— I know I must be dying, for I crave
Life—life, strong life—and think not of the grave And turf bound silence in the frosty year. —'Edith M. Thomas in New Yom Tribune.
fe.:sTHE RIVALS.
S3'» "Yes, sir. That old shun tin engine that's puffin an snortin like a broken winded old horse could tell a tale, if it wasn't so short o' breath. That's the very engine old John
Wright used to drive when I was his stoker. Let we see—I've been drivin three year— aya, it'll be ten year come next September. He was a fine figure of a man, was John. He stood 6 foot 1K in his sfcockin's, an wa« broad in the shoulders too. In his greasy peaked cap an oily blue jacket he looked a giant. He wae a queer un. I used to tell him he needed a wife to look after him. Ha, ha! He always made his tea wi' water out o' th' engine b9il«r, an when I laughed at. him he'd slap me on the back, an say, 'What's good for the horse is good for the rider, Harry.' He was a rare old sort." pa "Was be an old man?" "Oh, no he'd be 40 odd, I suppose, but
I was a young roan of 28, an he seemed old, like, to me. As I've said, he was a baohelor, an, as far as I knew, likely to remain one. There wasn't much of the ladies' nwin about John. But still waters ru*.i deep, they say, an John Wright had hi little secret. "About three inila out o' town, I used to notice that he whistled three times and always looked aoross a couple o' fields a bit farther on, as if he were look in for some thin. I asked him onoe or twice what it wasj but he edged me off, an changed the subject, so I didn't press it. But I kept my eyes open. "It was early winter when I first went on to stoke for John, an, of course, bein a goods train, it was generally gettin on for S 8 o'clock at night when we passed thiq partio'lar spot, bound for Barnham, 50 mile away. It's 'up bank,'as I dare say you know, from here to Longbridge, eight mile up the line, an we never got any great speed on tin til we'd passed that length, especially when we'd a heavy freight. But all I cculd make out for some months wag the dim outline of a oottage that had ^n 'up stairs' window with a red blind. The cottage lay a couple o' Helen away. What made me notice the red blind was thnt, as we passed, the window was always suddenly lighted up. "Aye, an scwasJohn Wright's face soon as ever he saw it. Such a smile—an b« bad a kind faoe, hrid old John—an then he'd seem lost a bit, as if he were thinkin o' something as was good to think about. "I oouldn't make it out, for you see I looked on John as a musty, crusty old bachelor, for all be were such a good sort.
But the light nights let the secret out. II were no use of his koepin his tongue tied then for there, in th' little front garden, aciose them two little fields, was a pink frock, anasunbonnet an a little hand flutter in a bit of a hankychief as we passed— every night, as true as the clock. "I chaffed John rarely about it, first fg time I saw it, an he blushed—be did in0. deed, sir! Though his face was grimy on the top and copper color under that, I'll swear he blushed. But he looked pleased an proud, for, by that time, we'd grown such thick friends that I'm sure he didn't mind me knowin. "Then, bit by bit, it all came out. John and her father, who used to be pointsman $ at Chubb junotion, half a mile farther up the line than the oottage, had been lads together. John had gone up for a 'camp' 1 every Sunday for many a year. He'd known Mary Mathers since she was born, an when she was a little lass he'd nursed her on h'is knee, an told her he'd wait for & her. I dare say he meant it in fun at the time, but, as she grew up, he knew he liked to be where she was better than any where else in the world. That's how ho put it, sir. Then Tom Mathers, her farther, fell ill, an I learnt afterward, an I guessed even then, that John Wright made his wages keep four instead of one. Mary's father never worked again. He was on his back for 18 months, an then be died. "An then, you may be sure, John was a father to the fatherless, an a husband to the widow—as far as lookin after 'em went, at any rate—only he wanted to be a husband to the daughter, Mary. Of course
I learnt this bit by bit, an I can't help flllin in things as come to my ears years after, for John was never the man to blow bis own trumpet. Ha, ha! He was well content wiJ the steam whistle—especially when passing Railway cottage. Poor John "Well, to cut a long story short, Mary ijseemed to make no objection. Why should |she? She'd never met anybody she liked Ibetter, and a finer fellow than John Wright juevcr walked. He got*her to promise to flight the lailip in the room wi' the red |blind on dark nights as he passed on his fengine, an to give him a wave of her hand light nights, for he said it was somefchin to be goin on with like. He'd a touch sentiment in him, had John, aye, he had that. "One Saturday night he says, 'Harry, you'd better walk o'er wi' me tomorrow.' 'Walk o'er wi' you,' I says. 'Where?' 'Why, to Mrs. Mathers,' to be sure. I'd like you to know my Mary. An then you can tell me what you think o' my sweetheart.' An as he said it. that sweot, far off look came iu his face, an I knew be loved that lass as few lasses are loved. "Well, I went, an I wished at the time I'd staid awny. It wns lovwat first 6ight wi' mo, an I felt I should never, never be the same again. God forgi' me, but after that Sunday I felt at times I hated John Wright. When she stood at the stile, at the crossing midway between the cottage an the signal box—as she did every evonin from the very day I went wi5 John—an waved her hand to bim, baalifullike, an he threw her a clumsy kiss, I felt I could ha' ksockcd him off the ongine. "I fought again it—an, you must unierstaml, I didn't feel that ve-ay all the lime, for we were good friends, an no one vrould have seeflj a difference. But when be talked of her in his quiet way—of bein wred an suoh like—it was like knives in me. "Then he pressed me to go again an spend a Sunday at the cottage. I put him tfT, but he wouldn't take'no' for an aniwer. So, whether for fear of hurtin his 'oelins or because I couldn't keep away, I •mi't say, but I yielded an went. After hat I went several times, an each time I rot deeper an deeper in love with John's iwee&heart, aye, an what seemed worse, I :ouldn't help knowin that Mary was troubled the same way. But I will say this, I lever tried to make Mary love me, an ncva word of lore passed between us, but sometimes I thought I saw trouhle in John's eyes, an then I'd vew to myself to co uo more. "Often enough I'd be on th' front o' th' fnginc, cr on Si' tender, when we passed he stile t&at »im»fr an do as I would, I •ouldn't help but look to catch her eye. in I never missed, thevgh she wared her
"One evenin, in the early autumn of that year, we were goin at as good a speed as the incline would let us an just gettin toward the oottage. John had sent me round to th' front o* th* engine with my oil can, an I couldn't help lookin ahead to see if Mary was Btandin waiting at tie stile. Yes, she was there as usual, right in front of us, for the line curved to the right just at the stile, an was hidden from view behind a little wood, I could see her print dress, an the same white linen bonnet she wore when I first saw her in the garden on that spring evenin. Oh, how my heart went out to her. an bow that old wicked feelin toward John rushed through roe an made my nerves tingle from head to foot. "Mary had her back toward us—a very unusual thing—an I remember wonderin why. Then the usual three whistles sounded, short an sharp. She turned instantly an threw up her hands like one demented. We went thuuderin down to the crossin where she stood an I saw ber eyes starin at me, like coals of fire set in a face as white as chalk. She f&soinated me. "Just then old John shut off steam an I heard him doin a thing. he'd never done afore—reversin the engine! All of a sudden Mary seemed to wake up an find a horrible dream true, for I beard, above the roar of the train, the grindin of the rails, an the shriek of the brakes that had been jammed hard down—1 heard one piercing scream. It was a word—my name—' Harry "Of course, all this happened in a breathless second or two. Half a lifetime is sometimes squeezed into a half a minute, sir. I took my eyes from Mary's face as we passed her, standin as if turned to stone, an I looked ahead. Heavens, what a sight! Bearin down on us at a great speed was an engine an tender—a runaway! It was comin down the bank tender tifrst, an we were timed to meet ac the junction. I saw it all in a flash. The train was jumpIn like a buckin horse, an, with my body all of a tremble, I'd as muoh as I could do to get back to t.he footplate. "There stood John Wright, of course. I seemed to see him an naught elee. He'd done all nw»n could do, an was standin stock still, with one hand on the lcvr. But it wasn't his stillness that made the tears start to my eyes. It was the look on his face. It made me nearly forget the doom to whioh we were rushin. I can't describe it. It was the look of a man who has nothin left to live for—whose hope bad been suddenly wiped clean out forever.
The instr ut he saw me his face changed. He sprang toward me, an seizing me
1
the arm with a grip of steel, spoko in a hoarse whisper that cou4d be heard above everything: 'Jump off, my lod—you've time—you oan do it. Jump off, for her sake. She loves thee, lad ?hc loves thee, for her sake. Harry, for heaven's sake!' "I said, 'Nay, John.' "'Quick,' he says. 'Harry, Harry! Jump for your Mary's sake!' "I swung one leg off the engine—life was dear—an prepared to spring into the grass. Then a great, surgin love for this man came over me, and I turned suddenlike an took him by the hand and I says, Joim, we'll stick together an die together —if it's God's will—for ber sake.' An he just gave me that sweet look an stept in front of me, as if to put hie great frame betwixt me an death, an there came a crash as if heaven an aarth had met, an I seemed to roll over an over, an then it felt as if the whole earth had risen up an smitten me, an knew no more.
"I woke from a troubled dream that seemed to have lasted a lifetime, an opened my eyes, half conscious an not sure but 1 was still dreamin. Then I slipped off again, an I remember thinkin that the sweet eyes that mine had seemed to meet were the eyes of my guardian angel. An they were, sir, for, when I opened my eyes again all the past came back to me with the tearful free of Mary Mathers. "I put my hand out on the counterpane, an she put hers gently on the top of it. An believe me, sir, that's the only way I ever 'popped the question.' We'd been through too much together to need much fuss. 'Where is he?' I framed my lips to say. I don't know whether she heard, but she understood, for she put her hand into hei bosom, an ew out a blaok edged card an held it before my eyes, while her own filled again \.ith tears. I read, 'In loving memory of John Wright, who was killed at the post of duty.' "And you've been happy in your married life?" "Happy! Happy isn't the word for it, sir. Ours is one of the matches made in heaven."—London Tit-Bits.
Wracked on Fort Fisher.
Technical training in any profession Is a good and necessary thing, but it must be supplemented by careful and constant practice in order to, eliminate the chances oi danger, especially on board ship.
In 1S68 the United States frigate B. was cruising off the Virginian coast under the command of Captain H. Captain H. had under his charge a number of young and enthusiastic midshipmen, graduates of the naval college at Annapolis.
It was his oustom to have them take tb« position of the ship at noon each day wher he took his own observations. Very often it happened that their calculations did not tally with his, but this only made bim the more anxious to exercise them in so necessary a mathematical problem.
One day he was sitting in his cabin, as usual, at noon, after he had completed his caoulations, and waiting for his "middies" to bring in theirs. The first oarne in almost immediately, visibly elated at having finished his task so soon and, as he believed, so oorreotly.
The captain took one look at the figures and then leaped from his seat so quickly that the astonished midshipman started back in alarm. Almost exploding with laughter, the old captain curved his hands before his mouth and hurried to the companionvray. "Clear away the boats!" he roared. "Clear away the boats! We're wrecked, hard and fast aground on top of Fort Fisher!"
There was a howl of laughter from on deck, ami tho erratic young man grasped his papers and rushed past the captain and ®ut, of the cabin without waiting for cere-mony.—Yo-jth's Companion.
Derivation of Fhinseu
Next to Shakespeare we draw most profusely from King James' version of the Bible for terse expressions, Proverbs and Ecclesiastes furnishing the larger proportion from the Old Testament and St. Paul's epistles from the New. Milton, though far behind these two great sources of English speech, gives us rnoro familiar expressions than any other writer after them. From him we have learned to speak of "a dim religious light," of "grim death," "a heaven OH earth" and "sanctity «f reason," of "adding fuel to the flame," of "tempering justice with mercy," of the "busy hum of men," "the light fantastio toe" (that boon to provincial reporters), and the "nea% handed Pbiilis." Chauoer, though rich in material for quotation, has given us 110 pithy phrases, but from Spenser, who sang of him as the "well of .English undefyled," we get "nor rhyme nor reason," "by hook or crook," "sweet attractive grace" and "through thick and thin."—Chambers' Journal.
The art o5 dentistry was introduced luto New York by John Greouwood in 178f. Ha is said to have made the first artificial teeth ever manufactured in this country.
In the second century a formidable line of fortifications was constructed by the 1
Ionian emperors from the upp&r Danube to the upp«r Rhine to keep out the Gar Bums.
TENS OF THOUSANDS WERE DP DDR ING THE DENVER BOOM.
Interesting Stories of Big: Faro and l'oker Games With the Limit Taken Off.
ri'
One of the biggest games played at a Denver gambling table Of recent years was that in McAvoy's plac[l four years ago. Capcain Jim Allison conducts the Hiawatha Club at Manitou, and this particular summer he had made a barrel of money and had it to burn, says a correspondent in the New York Sun. He came up to Denver and after casting about the town for a while decided to striker at McAvoy. He took a seat at one of the faro tables and commenced by making $50 bets, which was the limit under the general rule of the house. He won and lost and broke even at the end of about an hour with the remark that there was excitement in a game only when the limit was removed. He was informed that he oould bet any sum he desired and win or lose, it was the same to the house. The first thing he did was to drop $1,000, followed by an other, and then another to keep it company. Then he plunged about the table 1n a reckless fashion, and wound up by pulling in about $5,000 in chips worth $25 apiece in less than twenty minutes. An hour later he left $6,800 ahead of the game.
Allison circulated around town for sevhours, followed by an admiring crowd of tinhorns, and then returned and dropped his winnings in less than fifteen minutes. "Never touched me," was the remark he made as he saw his money raked in by the dealer. It was the only remark he made.
How the Game See-Sawed.
He now produced more money, and for five hours played one of the stiffest games ever put up in the West. Several times he was $10,000 ahead several times he was as much as $5,000 behind, and once he lost $11,000, but ondy pushed his hat back a little further on his head and put more money on the table. Within an hour he had it back, and' was forging ahead. At midnight he hat* over $17,000 to his credit amd at 1 a. m. a trifle over $18,000. At this point a porter left the house, and one of the safety deposit vaults of the city, where the gambler banked, was opemxl up to permit him to get more cash, for McAvoy did not want Allison to drain th© last cent in the house. But by the time the messenger returned, accompanied by a couple of armed men bearing $10,000, there waa no need of the money. Allison! was losing. He lost steadily, and a few minutes after 3 o'clock arose from the table, poorer by $7,200 than he was when he entered the house. It is estimated that Allison mus^ have won and Jost anywhere from $100,000 to $150,000 in the nine hours that he played and had he withheld from his winnings the percentage the house usually has against the player he would have been the winner, even with the amount dropped on the last turn, by anywhere from $10,000 to $15,000.
Played on a New System.
In 1881 the Missouri House was opened here. George Thomas and Dave Sanford of Leadville threatened to drop down and clean the place out. They talked about it and with $13,000 to their credit went against the tiger with a system they believed to be certain to win. They played In eight-hour watches cud sat eight d&ys.in the game. At no time were they more thai* $4,000 ahead, (fad 43 rule they were #tea£y l6efcra wheh
TERRE HAUTE EXPRESS, TUESDAY MORNING, MAY 18,1897.
A F"E W SAMPX.ES PRICES:
a
ON TURN OF A CARD
,10
the third w&ch was called off at the end of each day. But they had figured on everything going against them for 10 days, they said, and pluckily stuck it out. At 1 o'clock on a Monday morning, when within a few dollars from the end of the pile, Dave had his brother George called, meanwhile risking only small sums, and when George appeared entered into a whispered consulta: tioni with him. At its conclusion ^George answered, loud enough for everybody jin the room to hear: "Stick to th'e system."
The system was in making a nuiQper of small bets a percentage of larger bets, and reversing the rule as near as the "crowd could figure it, but there were times when only one bet was made and everything else was swept from the table. Sometimes' this was on a small, sum of money, and at other times ,on a large sum. If the single bet won, everything they had in winnings, and a percentage of the capital, was p.iced on a single card, and doubled or lost at a turn. The,capital, as they figured it, was the actua(i8.mount they had left from the original $13,000 the amount lost of the original sum cut no figure whatevr.
The Ghiuh Lasted Eight Days. Thus it was, at 3 o'clock in the morning of the eighth day, the last of the original money, with all the money won on the last turn, was played on the king to win. The king was selected according to a method they had it was placed sometimes to win, other times to lose, according to the number of times they had won or lost. When the 3 o'clock bet was made, curiously enough, they had just $13,000 on the king to win, exactly the amount they had started with eight days before. The cards were drawn amid suppressed excitement, and they lost. The brothers put on their coats without a word and left the house. Five hundred people saw" them lose the money.
A business man in this city who thought he knw all about pokei* called one day on a gambler who never was bluffed at any sort of a game and told him that he would like to go against a game of poker, no limit, but did not care to do it in a public gambling house. He would ask that a number of his friends be present, that he might have a square deal, and, of course, the gambler might have an equal number of his friends there. The reply was to the effect that all the men the gambler wanted was a dealer, a man to handle the cash, and a lookout, as h^ did not have times to watch the game himself. A private room was fitted up, and two colored porters were required to keep the crowd supplied with sandwiches and irrigating fluids. The business man played a stiff game, played it hard from the start, and wae ahead one time nearly half a hundred thousand dollars which v^as the amount he was after.
k£
Saw Him at Every Bet.
^he gambler saw him at every bet. It was a square game-as was .ever played, and the business man, who thought he could make a forhino at poker, gave a check for a tftfie toore than $20,000 at 4 o'clock in the morning—the amount his night of fun had co3tJ him— while the house stood hte expense of the wine and supper, as it always did on such occasions. Within a week, with the same gamblers as watchers over the game, the same business man went against another business man and lost $14,009.
Five ThoaKMnd Hollars t.ost on l)4c« During the Knights Templare conclave in Denver in 1893 two Templars met in the barroom of the Albany Hotel and shook dice for the drinks. One paid with a $20 gold piece, and soon they «we shaking for it. One of the men lost $o,000 at that gait before morning ..
Oae of
tie:
Our immense purchase of the Ely-Walker Salvage Stock
ts-
itrangeet eemes aod dne
te.- «"r
This is positively the only Sale of these goods of any importance in the city.5 On account of their arriving so late in. the.: week we were unable to give them much attention in our regular ads and can only tell you of a few of. the good things here but ask you to s:
Wmm mmk
Cgme and See the Qaods and Learn the PricesF
The prices we "wilt name will make this by fsur"the most interesting and profitable sale in the history of Terre Haute
5c a yard for ioc double fold Scotch Plaids. gc a yard for 25 double fold Scotch mixtures. 29c a yard for 75c double fold Scotch mousenbique. 15c a yard for 29c all wool novelties. 3 35c
yard for 65c black all woof 45-inch novelties. 39c f°r 95c black all wpol 44-inch mixtures.
NOTE.—A typographical error was made in the advertisement which appeared in Sunday Morning's Express. In this a price of 15c was quoted for 65c Black All Wool 45-inch novelties. The correct price and «.the one which should have appeared in the ad is 35c per yard. The goods area bargain at this price.
1
Then he «r.t up $4 and lost, and then lost $8, and the next time won $32. He stayed with those cards, sometimes to win, often to lose, but more often "open' than any other way, and won ae last bet 18 minutes after he had started, and had all his money "coppered' on the ace. He had lost $32,767, and on the turn of the card he won but he was only $1 ahead of the game when the amount he had lost was figured in. The case cards were now to be dealt, and three to one was offered if he called the turn, which he did after putting up $10,000. The bank paid him $30,000, and announced that it had suspended business. The stranger drifted out of town without telling his name. This was in 1879, before Leadville had shipped a ton of milling ore, but when more money changed hands than at any other time in the history of the camp. l.odt 875,000 at a Sitting:.
One of the biggest games ever played in the West was the one at which four men sat down in 1874. There were Clifton Bell, the best known gambler in Denver Charlie Sampson, Marshal Shafenburg, and Gilbert: N. Pierce. Sampson and Pierce dropped out after awhile. It was poker without limit. It was not long before Shafenburg and Bell were betting great sums, and all the town that couldn't get into the room stood in the hallway and lined the street, and bulletins were sent out. The two men were out for big game, and each had nerve and displayed it. Shafenburg had money, so had Bell. The town was looking on, and each man had a reputation to sustain. Shafenburg lost $75,000. That was enough to satisfy almost any man, but in response to a suggestion he told a friend that, like Paul Jones, he had just commenced to fight. The luck was on the other side, though, for he dropped, in money an4 property, including his home, a matter of over $250,0000, and was cleaned out slicker than a whistle when Bell asked him to name his poison and they adjourned.
The gambling houses of Cripple Creek during the height of the boom, 14 months ago, were notable in their way, but nobody ever heard of any remarkable winnings that did not go back into the hands of the table owners. No aggregate winnings were ever made in the city, but the professionals took about all the loose money in the town. When the fire swept the town last spring the gamblers were ahead of the game far enough to retire for life or seek other fields.
That Confident AltJA.
"He's a very enterprising young man." remarked the elderly gentlciaan. 'Very pushing and alert. He belongs to the rising generation." "1 shouldn't have dreamed it," replied Miss Cayenne. "Indeed?" "No. From his xnumera I should not have hesitated about concluding that ihe rising generation belonged to him."— Washington Star.
To Care a Cold in One Day.
T&ktf laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. AH 'druggists retund the mopcy If it fails to cure. 3c.
v''
GEDDES CO.
the quickest.ever played in the state brought a Chestnftt street gambling house in Leadville to the snapping point in 18 minutes. AJ hurdy-gurdy layout blew into the city under the title of the Silver Bar-Rooms. A fellow who was unknown to the crowd, but had just sold a mine for $35,000, walked in. The house had had a run of luck and this man knew it and talked loud. The only way to play faro, he said, was to stick to one card, and by a system of doubling his bets at certain times, which he had figured out, and staying with the game, he calculated that a man could get rich. Some one suggested that he quit talking and play. He dropped a dollar on the ace to win, and it didn't. Another went the same road.
top
%r
-a -••Mlffrt!
41
r„":
COFFEE DRUNKARDS.
Some Interesting Facts From a Berltk Fbylcian Regarding Coffee Drinking. Coffee drunkenness is one of the latesl dangers which doctors abroad are raising their voices against. Dr. Mendel, of Beritn, has published a clinical study, wnich is tba most thorough yet made, as he had a community of caffee drinkers under his constant observation, the working women m.and about Essen. He fouad mviiy of theaa women consumed over a pound of coffee a week. The leading symptoms of the ills that afflicted them were profound depitssion of spirits and frequent headaches, with insomnia. A strong dose of coffee wcul4 relieve them for a time, then the ailmen* would return. The muscles becano weak and trembling, and the hands tremoled when at rest. The victims suffered so seriously they dared not abandon the drinking oil coffee for fear of death.
These symptoms appear in .housands of people in a less degree, simply because they use a less amount of the drug, but steady use day toy day gradually piles up a very serious account which must be settled with the nervous system. Various disorders appear as a result of daily interference with the digestion -and proper action of th« nerves, paralysis, apoplexy, heart failure and other complications equally serious. To live plainly on pure food, is the secret of health and success in lif*. P«stum Cereal Food Coffee comes like a Classing to a m&a or woman who is suffering from the cofff® habit and yet dislikes to breakfast without coffee. Postum has the -olor ana taste of coffee if it be properly prepared, and being made from the carals by aotenUfic processes it furnishes the elements needed to rebuild the gray matter It the nerve tenters, where impeded coffee tends toward their destruction.
There is put one original genuine Postum Cereal Food Coffee, with hundreds of iariU« tions sold as "just as good."
Crack Warships and Steamers. And now the Brooklyn is the fasted! warship of her class. This has been th« uuvt-rying statement regarding every ona of cur new cruiwrs after their trial trips. If this tbiag continues, where will it end? With American line passenger vessels beating their own records and Amerioan fighting craft speedier than all others, this country will be a "flier" in peace or war. —Troy Times.
In 1851, the year of the great fires in St Louis, £aa Francisco suffered in the sams way, one conflagration In May destroying $10,000)000 worth of buildings, She trthejp in June oocasionisg a property loss of $£,• 000,000.
Alfonso VIII of Leon and Castile wa« styled The Noble on acoount of the many exalted traits of ebaroafeer he possessed.: Charles III of Navarze and hciimaii of Turkey rece-lved the sarae title.
The first in ttie field Sy and still «Briva!led
v|
Invented by the vasla*bis, whose pteiMKare ts on aroySuUka by the Lteiig COMTAJUf for w* Kfmto. For improved and ecoiwir.lc cooktr»
Per jfeftofenm, refmtiqg beet too
