The Syracuse Journal, Volume 27, Number 27, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 25 October 1934 — Page 3

THURSDAY, OCT. 25, 1934

COLLIDE Edwin. Riilif) Wylie WXU Service. wHHw 7 vDrSTAlafeßriflf’’

_ Tony Drake was sitting up. straight In bed, holding the paper before hl® and trying, with his left hand and without looking away, to strike a match ' for the cigarette between his lips. He did not succeed, but he kept on trying while his eyes searched down the • column of questions put by the re- j porters to Doctor Hendron—and his i answers. “•What will be the effect of this approach upon the earth T " It Is Impossible yet to tell? i “•But there will be effects?* , "•Certainly there will be effects.' | “ 'How serious?* ” Again Cole’ Hendron refused to an •wer. “'lt is impossible yet to say? "•Will the earth be endangered?* "Answer: ‘There will undoubtedly be considerable alterations of conditions of life here? “'What sort of alterations? 1 "That will be the subject of a later statement,* Doctor Hendron replied, j •The character and degree of the dis- ■ turbance which we are to undergo Is ' now the subject of study by a responsible group. We will attempt to : describe the conditions likely tb con- | front all of us on the world as soon , as they clearly define themselves? I •• ‘When will this supplementary . statement be made?* “•As soon as possible. 1 ‘ "Tomorrow? 1 "‘No; by no means as soon as to- ' morrow? "‘Within a week? Within a month?* ' “‘I would say that it might be made within a mouth?" tony was on and In spite ’ of himself, trembling. There was no possible mistaking of the undertone I of this astounding announcement. It spelled doom, or some enormous al- ’ teration of ail conditions of life on the world equivalent to complete dis- * aster. The League of the Last Days I There / was some reference to it In another j column, but Tony scarcely caught Its I coherence. Where was Eve; and what, upon this morning, was she doing? How was she feeling? What was she thinking? Might she, at last, be sleeping? Site had been up all night, and at > work assisting her father. The state- | meat had been released at one o'clock in the morning. How much more than ‘ this, which had been told, did Eve now know? Plainly, manifestly, the scien- i lists knew more—much, much more. ; which they dared not yet tell the pub- > lie. Dared not! That was the fact. , Kyto, who usually effaced himself, did not do so this morning. Kyto, ; having the untasted coffee for an ex- • case, called attention to himself ano ventured, “Mister, of course, comprehends the news?" “Yes, Kyto; I understand It—partly, at any rate." T may Inquire, please, perhaps the significance?" Tony stared at the little Jap.. He I bad always liked him; but suddenly ; he was assailed with a surge of fel- I low feeling for this small brown man 1 trapped like himself on the rim of the world. Trapped I That was it Trapped was the word for this strange feeling. » "Kyto. we’re In for something." "WhatF “Something rather—extensive, Kyto. One thing Is sure, we're all in for It together." “General—destruction?" Kyto asked, j Tony sijook bls head, and his reply , surprised himself. “No; If it were just that they’d say it—the end of everything. People after all Ln away are prepared for that, Kyto." Tony was reasoning to himself as much as talk- i Ing to Kyto. “No; this can't be justdestruction. It doesn't feel like it. Kyto." "What else could It be? 1 ' questioned the Jap, practically. Tony, having no answer, gulped his coffee; and Kyto had to attend to the phone, which was ringing. Five minutes after the telephone < rang Tony Drake was at the Hendrens’. The place was policed; Men. women and children from Park avenue, from Third and Second avenues, crowded the ridewalks; sound film trucks and photographers obstructed the street Radio people and reporters refused admittance, picked up what they could from the throng. Tony, at last, made proper contact with a policeman. The officer escorted him In. The ele vator lifted him high to the penthouse on the roof. No one was about but the servants. Miss Eve, they said, was tn the breakfast room; Doctor Hendron still was asleep. "Hello. Tosyl Come in!" Eve rose from the pretty little green table In the gay chintz curtained nook which they allied the breakfast room. Her qyea were bright, her face flushed the slightest bit with her excitement. Her hands grasped bls tightly. Longing for her leaped in Tony. D—n every thing else! Ho pulled her within bls arms and kissed bar; and her Ups, as they had last night, clung to his. Their hands held to each other a moment more; then Tony stepped back. ’ She bad dressed but for her frock Itself; she was to negligee, with her slim lovely arms tn loose-lace-decked silk, her white neck sad bosom half exposed. He bent and kissed her neck SSSw

"You’ve seen the papers? We were through with them before three. That Is. Father then absolutely refused to say anymore or hie anyone else. He “You didn’t?’' i “No; I kept thinking—thinking—" ■ "Os the end of everything. Eve?" ! “Part of the time. I did; of course • I did; but more of the time of you." “Os me—last night?" “I hoped you'd come first thing toi day. I thought you would . . . It’s . funny what difference the forma) an- | nouncement of it makes. I knew it ! all last night, Tony. I’ve known the general truth of it for weeks. But when it was a secret thing—something shared just with my father and with his friends—it wasn't the same as now. One knew It but still didn’t ad-' mlt it, even to one's self. It was theo- ! retical—ln one’s head like a dream. I not reality. We didn’t really do much. Father and L last night. I l mean do much in proving up the facts I and figures. Father had themall bel fore from other men. | sou’s plates and calculations simply confirmed what really was certain; i Father checked them over. Then he gave it out. That's what's made evj erything so changed." "Yet you didn’t give out everything , you know. Eve." . “No. not everything. Tony." I “You know exactly what's going to 1 happen,- don't you. Eve? It's going to I be dftomsday, Isn't It?" “No. Tony—more than doomsday." “What can be more than that?" • “Dawn after doomsday. Tony. The • world is going to be destroyed. Tony. oh. Tony, th** world is going to be | most thoroughly destroyed.; yet some I of us. will not die * Or we need not die—ls we accept the strange chal- [/ lenge that o<»d is casting at us from the skies’?' “The challenge that God casts at US • —what challenge? What do you ’ mean?" ! “111 try to tell you. Tony: There are two worlds eomlng toward us—two worlds torn, millions of years ago perhaps, from another star. For mll- . lions of years, probably they’ve been j wandering, utterly dark and utterly ‘ frozen, through space; and now they’ve found our sun; and they’re go- ' tng to attach themselves to it—at our i expense. For they are coming Into | the solar system on' a course which j will carry them close—oh. very close I Indeed, Tony, to the orbit of the earth. ’ They’re going to join up at the same ‘ distance from the sun as we are. Do 1 you understand?" ’ In spite of himself, Tony blanched, i “They’re going to jhlt the earth, you j mean? 1 thought so." "They’re not going to hit the earth. Tony, the first time around. The first time they circle the sun. they’re going to pass us close, to be sure; but they’re going to pass us—both of . them. Rut the second time they pass ! —well, one of them is going to pass I us a second time, too, but the other | one isn’t, Tony. The smaller one—- • Bronson Beta, the one about the same size as the earth and, so far as we can tell, very much like the earth—ls golug to pass us safely; but the big one, Bronson Alpha, is going to take out the world'? 1 “You know that. Ever "We know it l There must be a margin of error, we know. There may not be a direct head-on collision, J’ Tony; but any sort of encounter—even a glancing blow—would be enough and much more than enough to finish this globe. And an encounter Is certain. Every single calculation that has been made shows IL “You know what an exact thing astronomy is today, Tony. If we have three different observations of a moving body, we can plot Its path; and we’ve hundreds of determinations of these bodies. More than a thousand altogether! We know now what they are; we know their dimensions and the speed with which they are traveL I Ing. We know, of course, almost pre i ctoely the forces and attractions which will influence them—the gravitational power of the sun. Tony, yoa remember bow precise the forecast was In .the eclipse that New England. The astronomers not only foretold to a second when It would begin and end, but they described the blocks and even the rides of the streets in towns that would be In shadow. And their error was less than twenty feet “It’s the same with these Bronson bodies, Tony. They’re falling toward the sun. and their path can be plotted like the path of Newton’s apple dropping from the bough. Gravity Is the surest and most constant force In all creation. One of those worlds, which is seeking our sun, is going to wipe os out, Tony—aß of us, every soul of us that remains ou the world when it collides. But the other world—the world so much like this—will pass us close and go on. safe and sound, around the sun again—- “ Tony, do you believe in GodF “What’s that to do with this?" "So much that this has got me thinking about God again, Tony. God-the God of our fathers-the God of the Old Testament. Tony; the God who did things and meant something, the God of wrath and vengeance, but the God who also could be merciful to men. For He’s sending two world’s to us, Tony, not one—not just the one that will destroy os. He’s ixmffng the world that may save us. tooF “Save «s? What do yon m~nF~

“That's what the League of the Last Days Is working on, Tony—the chance of escape that's offered by the world ! like ours, which will pass so close and : go on. We may transfer to it, Tony, I if we have the will and the skill and the nerve! We could send a rocket to the moon today. If It would do us any good, if any one could possibly live <m the moon after he got there. Well; Bronson Beta will puss us closer than the moon. Bronson Beta to the size of the earth, and therefore can have an atmosphere. It to perfectly possible that people—who are able to reach it—can Uve there. “It's a world, perhaps very like ours, which has been In immutable cold and darkness for millions of years, prob ably, and which now will be coming to life again. "Think of it, Tony I The tremendous, magnificent adventure of making a try for it I It was a world once like ours, circling around some sun. People lived on it; and animals and plants and trees. Evolution bad occurred there, too, and progress. Civilization had come. Thousands of years of It, maybe. Tens of thousands of yean—perhaps much more than we have yet known. Perhaps, also, much lesa. It’s the purest speculation to guess in what stage that world was when It was tom from its sun and sent spinning into space. “But in whatever stage it was in. you may be sure tt is in exactly that stage now; for when it left Its sun. life became extinct. The rivers, the lakes, the seas, the very air, froze and became solid, encasing and keep ing everything just as It was. though it wandered through space for ten million yean. But as it approaches the sun, the air and then the seas will thaw. The people cannot possibly come to life, nor the animals or birds or other things; but the cities will stand them unchanged, the imple ments, their homes—all will remain and be uncovered again. “If this world were not doomed, what an adventure to try for that one, Tony I And a possible adventure—a perfectly possible adventure, with the powers at our disposal today!" Tony recollected, after a while, that Balcom had bld him to learn from Hendron, az definitely as possible, the date and nature of the next announcement. How would it affect stocks? Would the Stock Exchange open at aU? He remembered, at last, it was a business day; downtown he had duties—contracts to buy an J orders to sell stocks. He did not venture to ask to have Hendron awakened to speak to him but, before ten o’clock, he did leave Eve. He walked to the subway. “Gimme five cents for a cup of coffee F Tony stopped, stared. This panhandler, too, was trapped, with him and Kyto and Eve and all the rest, on the rim of the world which was coming to Its end. Did be have an inkling of it? Whether or not, obviously today he must eat Tony's hand went Into his pocket Speculation about the masses as sailed him. What did they think this morning? How differently would they do today? (TO BE CONTINUED.) NEW SALEM Mrs. Joe Baumgartner called at the Joe Smith home Monday afternoon. Jay Hartman and family of near Albion and Agnes Pinkerton of LaPort spent Sunday with Roy Pinkerton and family. Mary Anglin spent the week end with. Emory Stookey. Lucile, Donald, Harry and Marjorie Smith, Pearl Pendergrass and Arnold LeCount spent Thursday evening in Mishawaka and South Bend. A Emory Guy, wife and Mrs. Ida Guy, Glen Smith and family of New Paris spent Thursday evening in the Joe Smith home. John Auer and wife, Art Hummel and children spent Saturday evening with the George Auer family. Quite a number from this vicinity attended the funeral of Earl Auer held at the Evangelical church in Syracuse on Tuesday. Harry Smith is in Camp Knox, Kentucky, preparing for the CCC camp. Mr. and Mrs. George Mosier are spending a few day* at the World’s Fair in Chicago. Joe Smith, wife and daughter Lucile and Mike Kuneff called on Emory Guy, wife and Mrs. Ida Guy Sunday afternoon. AFRICA. Miss Betty Shock spent her two days vacation with her sister, Mrs. Irene Ferverda. James Rothenberger and family were Sunday dinner guests fat the Jonas Cripe home. Mr. and Mrs. W»U Swihart and family were supper guests in the Jacob Click home, Wednesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Martin McClintic spent the week end visiting the Century of Progress. Frederic Kuhn was pleasantly surprised, Saturday evening, when a few relatives and friends arrived at his home with well-filled baskets, to remind him of his birthday. Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. Allen Gordy, Emmett Gordy, Mr. and Mrs. Warren Morehead and family, Jonas Cripe, Elizabeth Shock Maurice Dorsey, Mr. and Mrs. Will Kuhn, Elmo Shock and family. Mis. Lavina Klingaman, Anna Morrison, Charles McClintic spent Friday night in the home of Mrs. Golds McNee. in Mtohor*., called

THE SYRACUSE JOURNAL

Saturday night, Jacob Click and family visited friends in the McNees home and on Sundav attended the funeral of Miss Edgell. Elmo Shock and family were Sunday dinner guests in the Chas. Weimer home. Mr. Weimer remains in a critical conuition. J Miss Pauline Shock spent the week ‘ end with her sister, Mrs. Lee Dye and family of Elkhart. They brought her home, Sunday. Miss -Doris Shock spent her vacation with her sister, Mrs. Frederic Kuhn. DISMAL Miss AdaKa Bamberger of Goshen was a visitor of Merrit Lung and family. After spending a few days in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lon Burley, helping to care for her mother, Mrs. Leonard Snepp Returned to her home at Monroeville Sunday. Mr. Shuder of Milford was in the Dismal Monday in the interest of the corn and hog project. Miss Mae Fern Blackman of Fort Wayne was the guest of Claus Bobeck and family over the week end. Mr. and Mrs. Mart Ruple of Waveland Beach were Elkhart visitrs Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Virg-il Bobeck and son Arlin spent Friday with the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hire and family of Albion. . Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Craig are leaving for their home in Pittsburgh Thursday. / ' ’ Dora Clingerman and wife were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ainos Magneson of Kimmel Sunday. ZION. Mr. and Mrs. Mike Kuniff of Mishawaka and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Smith and daughter Lucile called >n Mr. and Mrs. Einory Guy and Mrs. Ida Guy, Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Miller and family spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Niles and family. Mr. and Mrs. David Clayton entertained guests from Oklahoma and Kansas over the week end. Mr. and Mrs. Einory Guy and Mrs; Ida Guy called on Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Smith and family, Thursday evening. Dr. and Mrs. Clyde Landis and daughter Betty of Chicago spent Saturday night and Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Marl Landis. The Zion Ladies W. M. A. met last Thursday at their usual place. The day was spent house cleaning. FOUk CORNERS. Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Geyer and Mrs. Joe Bushong and son Jon = of Syracuse visited the Darr and Deithrick homes near Goshen. Messrs Hollar and McDonald reroofed the house at the James Myers farm. Mrs. Ulery and Mrs. Hoover called at the home of Mrs. Ida Myers Saturday morning. Mrs. Myers returned home with them and remained until Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Crist Darr were Elkhart and Goshen visitors, Monday, and called at the home of their son. Mrs. Mary Berkey of South of Milford was a caller at the Mary Ulery home, ’Monday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Deithrick and two childrqp spent Saturday and Sunday at the A. W. Geyer home. Mr. and Mrs. Crist Darr, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Darr and two children motored to Fort Wayne, Sunday, where they spent the day with the family of Dr. and Mrs. C. S. FairMary Ulery called at the home of LaTone Jenson, Monday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Ulery and Mrs. Hoover and Mrs. Myers were Fort Wayne visitors, Sunday. Monday evening when Mrs. LaTone Jenson went to the chicken house to gather eggs, she discovered that something had been helping itself to the eggs. She got a hammer and board and closed the nest until Mr. Jenson came home. Then they found that the intruder was an opossum. CONCORD ■ Those who were guests at the Ernest Mathews home, Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Beiswanger and family, Mrs. Thomas, Yvonne Bucher and Charles Beiswanger. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Henwood and daughter Betty spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Bertram Whitehead and family. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Bucher and son Wayne spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Jme* Whitehead. Mr? Fleck and Mrs.

NOTICE Please do not bu m leaves on the Black'Top Streets. Ernest O. Buchholz, Town Clerk -- ; . - • '

Blanche Anderson of Indianapolis were guests at the Eldon Wyland home. Chartes Beiswanger returned home last week from Minnesota, where he has spent several months. Lewis Thomas, Aletha and Ardis Beiswanger were in Chicago from Thursday until Saturday, attending the Century of Progress and visiting friends,; Mr. and Mrs. Kowitz. Mr. and Mrs. Victor Mickelson, August Johnson of Lake Lillian, Minn., Mrs. Carrie Beiswanger of Dwight, I&k, spent several days with RalphClieiswanger and family. Mrs. Maude Jones assisted Mrs. Cora Wyland with her house work, Saturday. Mrs. Wyland is suffering I with a sore thumb. | Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Strieby spent | Sunday with Mrs. Marie LeCount > and George Strieby. SOLOMON’S CREEK Mr. and Mrs. Harry Mcßride and I son Robert attended a birthday dinner at the home of Tom Shrock and family near Hard Scrabble Sunday. Curtis LeCount spent Sunday with his brother Robert, in Syracuse. ‘ Mrs. Maggie Rex of Benton spent 1 Sunday with Mrs. Pearman at the Albert Longcor home. Mrs. Pearman is in very poor health. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth _ Hapner entertained their Sunday school ; class last Wednesday evening, j Those who spent last Thursday evening at the George Darr home pealing apples for apple butter were I Mrs. George Darr from Syracuse, Albert Zimmerman and family,' Mrs. . Byron Grubb and two children*. Mr. and Mrs. John Darr, Mr. I and Mrs. Manford Mishler spent | Sunday wit)! Rev. and Mrs. Eiler | Laketon. Mrs. Allie Darr and her ; brother Henry Whitmer of RichI vilte and Mr. and Mrs. Harry I Smaitz and son Robert of Leesburg i were also there. Don’t forget the Home Coming Sunday at this place. Everyone invited to come. Music will be furnished in the forenoon by the Church Orchestra. Rev. L. G. Bears, who i was a former pastor of this place 18 years ago, but now of Washington I Center, will be there and be the principle speaker both morning and afternoon. A basket dinner at the noon hour. The afternoon special numbers are to be given from neighboring churches, whose pastors have been invited. Come for the forenoon service, bring your dinner and the day. Vic Niles and family spent Sunday evening at Albion. Rev. Brock and family and Mr. and Mrs. Sailor Darr were callers at the Ben Zimmerman Home Sunday. Billy Zimmerman is improving. Miss Helen Hillbish spent the week end here with her parents. The Leaders Class will have a Hallowe’en party at the home of Evelyn and Harold Waddel next week. WESTEND Miss LaVerda Warstler of South Bend; John Cripe of Goshen, Mrs. Russell Neff of near Milford; Albert Warstler and sons were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Whitehead. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Niles were Sunday evening guests of Mr. and Mrs. Milton Rensberger. ■ A series of two weeks meetings j will begin at’ the Bethany church, ■ Monday evening, Oct. 29, conducted i by the Rev. Charles. Oberlin of Peru, Ind. Those who were Sunday guests at the home of Rev. Raleigh Neff were Rev. Manley Deeter and wife, Mr. ] and Mrs. Emory Vorhis, Mr. and | Mrs. Henry Neff, Mr. and Mrs. E. i Neff and daughter. Miss Phyllis Harris spent the

Milirena NEW RIVER SMOKELESS COAL is mined from the Sewell Seam in tjbe heart of the famous Smokeless Coal fields of West Virginia. * • * This coal is unusually clean and firm in structure. It will satisfy those who are accustomed to burning Pocahcntaa. McClintic, Coiwell & Gordy 115—PHONE—125

week end in Goshen at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Hartman. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Sheffield. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Ogle and sons spent Sunday in South Bend at the home of Mrs. Anna Kizer. Clifford Showalter and Eugene Sheffield, who have been employed on Road 9 the past six months, south of Indianapolis, have been transferred to’ Fort Wayne. Mrs. Milo Troup, who has been on the sick list is much improved. Milton Rensberger is in ill health. Mrs. John Arnold spent last week in Mishawaka. TIPPECANOE Sunday dinner guests at the J. Garber home were: Clarence Mock and family, L. Lantz and family and Noble Kline--I. Kuhn took Sunday dinner with Phoebe and Winnie Goppert. Noble and Ormel Kline took dinner in the J. Garber home Saturday. Clarence Mock and family, Stan-, ley Morehead and family, Mrs. J. L. Kline and daughter Mayzel, made a trip to Elkhart, Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Vivian Sharp spent. Sunday in the Chas. Saidla home. Albert Gilbert, Adrian Warstler and Miss Neva Figart were Sunday callers in the J. L. Kline home. Arthur Stewart and wife called on Jessie Baugher Sunday evening. Clinton Cox and wife were in Mishawaka Sunday. _ Jessie Baugher visited with Mrs. C. Cox Wednesday. BURIED IN LIGONIER Mrs. Jane Jones and family were called to Leesburg last week on account of the sickness and death of William Benton Guy. They returned home, Monday. Mr. Guy was the youngest of seven children of Hamilton and Harriet Guy and was born Sept. 8, 1852 near Leesburg. He died in the McDonald hospital in Warsaw, Saturday, aged 82. His surviving relatives ate two nieces, Mrs.« Jane Jones of Syracuse and EUen Kinney of Everett, Wash. Funeral services were held Monday afternoon and burial was in the Leesburg cemetery. Rev. A. J. Armstrong suffered with nose bleed, Sunday morning, which lasted about two hours, causing him to go home from SundaySchool and making it impossible for him to have charge of the morning church service. His father preached I in his stead;

f rr E ketering’S rao ™ | FRIDAY AND SATURDAY SPECIALS 10 lbs pure Granulated Sugar?....s .51 2 lbs. Pure Lard — .25 : 3 lbs. Bananas. .19 : 6 Grape Fruit .25 s 100 lbs. Laying Mash 2.39 • 100 lbs. Scratch Feed ... r 2.25 : 6 lbs. Eating Apples .25 | : 12 ga. Remington Shells, b0x.... .85 Burco Coffee, lb. 5 ...... .19 e Dried Peaches, lb : 45 Pop Corn, pkg. 07 i : : 24 lbs. Burco Flour, .85 : * OPEN SUNDAYS and EVENINGS

Specials for Saturday All Items Cash SUGAR, 10 lbs 43c With SI.OO order of Groceries not including Flour. . ■- - - - ' ■■ » - . PET MILK, 3 large cans ............ —.— 20c COOKIES, glazed honey, <!oz, 10c: 3 doz. 24c CORN, 15c can .... - - -10 c GRAPEFRUIT, reg. 10c, now 3 for „ .. 18c /'Tp a Chesterfields, luckys lIUAKLIILd, CAMELS, 2 PACKAGES —- *3C SALMON, Pink, 18c can for 15c DATES, Bulk, fresh, lb — l2 c GRAPES, Tokay, lb. 8c CRANBERRIES, 15c qt.; 2 for .. 25c Seider’s Grocery

ROUND TABLE MEETS f The Eadies of the Round Table met with Mrs. liene Disher Monday evening. Fifteen members responded to roll call, the response being “Who’s Who.” After the regular business session Mrs. Catherine Carr read three original stories which had been written by her mother, Mrs. J. C. Hay of Silver Lake. “A True Story”, “Stella” and “A Bird With A Broken Wing.” TRY A JOURNAL WANT AD Grieger’s FANCY GROCERIES Phone 15 Free Delivery casA OLE(X nr 2 Pounds, MV v* Grapenuts, 1 1 Package 1 • C p«st TMSties LARGE 2 for TAPICOA - 19MINUTE, 2 pkgs I*>C SUGAR ro r i BUTTER, 2 7 r PER POUND - AiV I Soap, IQP. & G., 7 bars FLOUR, 24 lb. SACK OVV OYSTERS FRESH FISH MEATS VEGETABLES and FRUITS

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