The Syracuse Journal, Volume 27, Number 33, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 6 December 1934 — Page 3
THURSDAY. DEC. W 4
V/HEWo©,., COLU Edwin and «er4< A?W.yJW - WND Service. VdSBF wMWr
CHAPTER VI Eve was at a tiny table where a bine flame burned below a coffee percolator. and where an oil lamp, following the failure of electricity, augmented the faint gray of approaching dawn. Was It the light, Tony wondered, or was Eve thia morning really so pale? He came to her, and whatever the rules for this day. he claimed her with his arms and kissed her. “Now,” tie said with some satisfaction. “you're not so pale.” She did not disengage herself at once; and before she did. she clung tightly to him for a moment Then she said. got to have your coffee now, Tony." “I, suppose so—But there’s no stim ulant In the world like you. Eve." She turned the tiny tap of the silver coffee pot tilled a cup for him. one for herself. A few minutes later they went down together. The rushing ebb of the tremendous tide was swirling less than a foot deep over the pavement, and was falling so rapidly that the curb emerged even while they were watching. From upper floors, where many automobiles had been stored against the tide, cars were reaching the street One drove up to Tony and Eve and stopped. The driver turned It over to them; and Tony took the wheel with Eve beside him. They went with all possible speed, no longer encountering the tide Itself, but lurching through vast puddles. Debris from offices, shops and tenements swept by the tides the streets. A few people appeared; a couple of motorcycle police, not In the least concerned with cars, were making some last inspection of the city. Bodies lay in the street: and now on the right a haze of smoke drifted from an area that had burned down during the night The East river, when they reached it was a torrent low In It* channel being sucked dry toward the sea. Wreckage strewed the strangely exposed bottom. The bridge: a few miles more of flood debris in steaming
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The Ark—th* Focal Point, th* Dream and Hope of Ail Tho«e Whom Hendron Had Gathered Toqether—Stood Upright on a Gigantic Goneret* Block In a Cradle of Bt**l Beam*.
streets. Then town* and villages which also had been overswept Now the country with It* higher hill*, whereon Tony and Eve marked the Um left by the water at It* height They dripped through empty village* and rose to hamlet* wboae Inhabitant* lingered. staring In a dulled wonderment at the speeding car. The effect of the vast desolation beat Into the soul; derelict, helpless people, occasional burning house*. They climbed a slope with a sharp turn which was blocked; and there two men sprang at them. Tony Jerked out his pistol; but today—and though be was on his way to his mother who was murdered—be could not puU the trigger on these men. He beat down on* with th* butt. Instead, and with th* barrel cowed the other. H* got the car dear and with Eve drove on. Ah—here was the road hem*! Home! His home, where be . had been bora and where he was a 1 little boy. ‘Home, the home that had been bls father** and hl* grandfather * and before that; for four goaoraflona Dowa this road from his home, some man named Drake bad gone to fight tn the World war. th* Civil war, tn 181 X and to Join the army of Wash " ington. Tony tried not to think about hl* mother yet. Eve placed her hand over I his which held the steering wheel. 1 “Ton'll let me stay close beside you, Tony.** she appealed. • “T*a. We’re almost there." Familiar landmarks bobbed up on both aides, everywhere: a log cabin be had built as a boy; here was the way to th* old well—the* "Revolutionary | welt" I "Here we are." The house was before then, white, calm, confident. Tony’s heart leaped. How he loved it—and she who had been Its spirit I How often she had Stood in that «»-wrwa~ h!m’
> Some one was standing there now—i an old woman, slight, white-haired. Tony recognized her—Mrs. Haskins. ! the minister s wife. She advanced j toward Tony, and old Hezekiah HasIkins took her place in the doorway. “What happened?" Old Haskins told Tony, as kindly as he could: “She was alone: she did not feel afraid, though all the village and even her servants had fled. The band of men came by. 'She did not try to keep them out Knowing her—and Judging by what 1 found—she asked them In and offered them food. Some of them had been drinking; or they were mad with the intoxication of destruction. Some one shot her cleanly —once. Tony. It Is certain. Tony, she did not suffer.” Tony could not Speak. Eve clung to his hand. “Thank God for that Tony she whispered. Briefly Tony unclasped his hand | from Eve’s and met the old minister’s quivering grasp, lie bent and kisaed Mrs. Haskins* gray cheek. “Thank you. Thank you both.” he whispered. "You shouldn't have stayed here; you shouldn’t have waited for me. But you did.” •/ h Old Hezekiah and bls wife, and Orson the sexton, and Tony Drake and Eve Hendron stood on the hilltop where the men of the Drake blood and the women who reproduced them In Bill generations of memory lay buried. A closed box lay waiting its lowering into the ground. -“Hear my prayer, O Lord; and with thine ears consider my calling. . . , . For 1 am a stranger with thee, and a sojourner as ail my fathers were. “Oh. spare me a little, that I may recover my strength before I go hence, and be no more seen." Old Hezekiah Haskins held the book before him, but he d ! d not read. :A thousand times In his fifty years of the ministry he had repeated those words. “Thou turnest man to destruction; again thou sayest. Come again, ye children of men." Men and children of men on Bron-
•on "Beta, too. "Slen millions and thousand* of million* of year* In the mak Ing. Azoic time—proterozoic time, hundreds at million* of year*, while life •lowly developed In th* sea*. Hundreds of million* more, while It emerged from the seas; a hundred million more, while reptile* ruled th* land, the *ky and water. Then they were swept away; mammals came; and man —a thousand million years of birth and death and birth again before even th* first brick could be laid In th* oldest dty on Bronmm Bet*, which men on earth had seen last night with their telescopes. “For a thousand years tn thy sight are but as yesterday; seeing that la past as a watch in the night* when thou art angry, all om day* are gone; we bring our year* to an end like a tale that is told.” The sexton and old Hezekiah alone could not lift the box to lower IL Tony had to help them with It He did; and hi* mother lay beside her husband. Tonight, when the huge Bronson Alpha and Bronson Bet* with it* visible cities of It* own dead were on this side of the world again, the tide might rise over this KIIL What matter? His mother lay where she would have chosen. A short time now, and all this world would end. "TH take you away." Tony was saying to the old minister and his wife and Hw older sexton. “We're flying west tonight to the central platean. We’ll manage somehow to take you with na." “Not me." said the old sexton. “Do not take me from the will of the Lord!" Nor would the minister and bls wife be moved. They would Journey today. when the water receded, into the higher hills; but that was all they nrasM tkn. • ••*••• alrlnne settled to «arih on th*
| htgfi ground between Lake Michigan ! and Lake Superior. Just as the Broni son Bodies, appallingly large, rose over the eastern horizon. Nearly a thou- ■ sand people came from the great canI tonment to greet Tony and Hendron’s daughter. The scientist had given up his New Mexico venture entirely. and brought his congregation of human being* all to his Michigan retreat. Greetings, however, were not fully made until the Bronson Bodies hud been observed. Beta now exceeded the moon, and it shone with a pearly luster and a brilliance which the moon had never possessed. Around It was an aureole of soft radiance where Its atmosphere, thawed by the warmth of the sun It so rapidly approached, had completely resumed its gaseous state But Bronson Beta did not compare with the spectacle of Alpha. Alpha was gigantic—bigger than the sun. and seemingly almost as bright, fnr the clouds which streamed up from every part of its surface threw back the sun’s light, dazzling, white and hard. There was no night. Neither Eve nor Tony had seen the camp in its comple tton; and when wonderment over the ascending bodies gave way to uneasy familiarity. BHot James took them on a tour of Inspection. - Hendron had prepared admirably for the days which be had known would lie ahead of his hand-picked community. There were two prodigious dining halls, two buildings not unlike apartment houses in which men and women were domiciled. In addl tion there was a builtling resembling a hangar set on end. which towered above the surround'ng forests more than a hundred feet. At Its side was the landing field, space for the shelter Ing of the planes, and opposite the landing field a long row of shops which terminated tn an Iron works. It was to the machine shops and foundry that Eliot James last took his , companions. “The crew here." he said to Eve. “has already finished part of the construction of the Ark which your father Is planning. If we wanted to. we could build a battleship here; in the lahorirtories anything that has& been done could be repeated; and a great many things have been accomplished that have never been d«»ne before. Ry tomorrow night I presume that the entire New York equipment will have been reinstalled here." Tony whistled. “It’s amazing. Genius, sheer genius! How about food?" Eliot James smiled. “There la enough food for the entire congregation as long as we will need It" “Now show us the ’Ark.’” Eve’s father came out from the hangar to act as their guide. From the hysterical white glare of the Bronson Bodies Eve and Tony were taken into a mighty chamber which rose seemingly to the sky itself, where the brilliance was even greater. A hundred things inside that chamber might have attracted their attention—its flood-lighting system, or the tremendous bracing of its metal walls; but their eyes were only for the object in Its center. The Ark on that late" July evening—the focal point, tha dream and hope of all those whom Hendron had gathered together—stood upright on a gigantic concrete block in a cradle of steel beams. Its length was one hundred and thirty-five feet. It was sixty-two feet in diameter, and Its shape was cylindrical. Streamlining was unnecessary for travel in the outer reaches of space, where there was no air to set up resistance. The metal which composed It was a special alloy eighteen Inches In thickness, electroplated on the outside with an alloy which shone like chromium. After Tony had looked at h for a long time, he said. “It la by far the most spectacular object mankind has ever achieved." Hendron glanced at him and continued his exposition. "A second shell, much smaller, goes inside; and between the inner shell and its outer guard are several layers of insulation material. Inside the shell will be engines which generate the current. Which In turn releases the blast of atomic energy, store-chambers for everything to be carried, the mechan isms of control, th* aeration plant, the heating units and the quarters for passengers." Tony tore hi* eyes from the sight. "How many will she carry?" he asked quietly Hendron hesitated; then he said. “For a trip of the duration I contem plate, she would be able to take about on* hundred people." Tony’s voice was still quieter. “Then you have nine hundred Idea lists in your camp here." The older man smiled. "Unless lam greatly mistaken, I have a thousand." "They alt know about the whip?" “Something about it Nearly half of them have been working on it, or on apparatus connected with IL" " 'You pay no wages?" ’Tve offered wages. In most eases they’ve been refused. I have more than three million dollars tn gold available here for expenses encountered to dealing with people who still wish money for their time or materials.* “I see. How long a trip do you con template?” Hendron took the young man’s breath. “Ninety hour*. That is, pro sided,"—and hl* voice began to shake—"provided we can find proper materials with which to line our blast tubes. Otherwise we wouldn’t be able to propel this thing for more than a few minutes. I—" Eve looked at her father. “Dad. you’ve got to go to bed. And don't worry so. We’ll find the alloy all right We’ve done everything else." Hendron nodded; and Tony, looking at him. realized for the first time how much the scientist had aged recently Tony escorted Eve to the women s dormitory. Eve hade him good night, then went Inside. Tony walked with alow strides to the top of a neighboring hill Hendron’s village looked •n the northern side like a university campus, and on the southern aide like the heart of a manufacturi >g district All around It stretched the Michigan wilderness. The ground had been chosen partly because of the sge and firmness of Its geological base, and partly because at Its Isolation. He sat down «* a large stone. The hot w!n4 blew with l“t?reaslnj
THE SYBACUSS JOURNAL
violence, and the double shadows, one sharp and one finfnt "h;ch were ca<t by all things in the I- ' t of the Bron son Bodies, were abruptly obliterated by the passage of a dark cloud. Tony’s mind ran unevenly and Irresolutely. “All these people." he thought “these brilliant, temperamental men and women, have subsided and made themselves like soldiers in Hendron’s service—amazing man—Only a hundred people—” Fears assailed him: “Suppose they don't complete the Ark successfully, and she never leaves the ground? Then *ll these people would have given their lives for nothing. Suppose It leaves the earth and falls—falls back for hundreds' of miles, gaining speed all the way. so that when It hit the atmosphere it would turn red-hot and burn Itself up Just like a meteor." Tony thought of the tides that would rise that night and on following nights; and faintly, like the palpitation of a steamer’s deck, the earth shook beneath his feet as if in answer to his meditation. And Tony realized that the heart of the earth was straining toward its celestial companions. • •’*•*#• On the night of the twenty-fifth, tides unprecedented In the world’s history swept every seacoast There were earthquakes of varying magnitude all over the world. In the day that, followed. volcanoes opened up. and Islands sank beneath the sea ; and on the night of the twenty-sixth the greater of the Bronson Bodies came within its minimum distance from the earth on this their first approach. No complete record was ever made of the devastation. Eilot James, who made some tabulation of It in the succeeding months, could never believe • all that he saw and heard, but it must have been true. The eastern coast of the United States sustained a tidal wave seven hundred and fifty feet in height, which came in from the sea in relentless terraces and inundated the land to the very foot of the Appalachians. Its westward rush destroyed every building, every hovel, every Skyscraper, every city, from Bangor In Maine to Key West in Florida. The tide looped into the Gulf of Alexico, rolled up the Mississippi valley. It roared around South America, turning the Amazon basin into a vas* inland sea which stretched from what had been the east coast to the Andes mountains on the west coast The speed of this tide was beyond calculation. . 4 Every river became a channel for It It spilled over Asia. It inundated the great plain of China. It descended from the Arctic regions and removed much of France.* England and Germany, all of Holland and the great Soviet empire, from the list of nations Arctic water hundreds -of feet deep flowed into the Caspian sea and hurled the Ifist of its august inertia upon the Caucasus. Western Asia and Arabia, southern India, Africa and much of Australia remained dry land. More than half the population of the world died in the tides that rose and subsided during the proximity of the Bronson Bodies. But those who by design or through accident found themselves on land that remained dry were not necessarily spared. The earthquake which Tony had felt in Michigan was the first of a series of shocks which increased steadily in "violence for the next forty-eight hours, and which never afterward wholly ceased. Hendron had chosen his spot well, for It was on* of the relatively few portions of the undeluged world which was not reduced to an untenable wasteland of smoking rock and creeping lava. As hour by hour the earth presented new surfaces to the awful gravitational pull of the Bronson Bodies, a serie* of stupendous cataclysms took places Underneath the brittle slag which man consider* both solid and enduring lie thousands of miles of dense compressed molten material. Th* earth’s crust does not hold back that material It Is kept in place only
Km T'sT ||SS| Two Men Sprang at Them. Tony Jerked Out Hi* Pistol. He Seat Down On* With the Butt and With the Barrel Cowed the Other, by a delicate adjustment of gravity; and the Interference of the Bronson Bodies distorted that balance. The earth burst open like a ripe grape! From a geological standpoint the tides which swept over were a phenomenon of bat trifling magnitude. The center of the continent of Africa split In two as if a mighty cleaver had come down on it and out of the grisly incision poured an unquenchable tumult of the hell that dwells within the earth. Chasms yawned in the ocean float; swallowing levels oF the sea and returning it instantaneously in continents of steam. The great plateau of inner Tibet dropped like an express elevator nine hundred feet. South America was riven into two island*, one extending north and south to the shape of a sickle, and the other, roughly circular, composed of all that remained of the high lands of Brazil. North America reeled and shuddered. Split snapped, boomed and leaped. The Rocky mountains lost their Immobility and danced like waves of water. From the place that bad been YellowFton* park g mantle of lava wa«
over thousands of squuFFmnas. Th* coastal plain along th* Pacific disappeared. and the w*ter moved up to dash itself in fury against * range of active volcanoes that extends from Nome to Panama. Gases, steam and ashes welled from ten thousand vents into the earth’s atmosphere. The sun went out. the stars were made Invisible. Blistering heat blew to the ends of the earth. The polar ice melted and a new raw land emerged, fiery and shattered, mobile and catastrophic. Those human beings who survived the world’s white-hot throes were survivors for the most part through good fortune. Few escaped through design —-on the entire planet only a dozen places which had been picked by the geologists as refugees remained habitable. (TO BE CONTINUED.) FOUR CORNERS. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bushong of Syracuse entertained the Messrs and Mesdames Deithrick and Darr and children of near Goshen; Messrs and Mesdames Geyer, Snyder and Darr at a Thanksgiving dinner which was enjoyed by all. Mr. ’ and Mrs. Alva Pinkerton entertained company at Thanksgiving who also helped them to do their butchering. Mr. and Mrs. Hummel have moved from the Kitson farm to one of the late Limon Wilson farms. Mrs. Crist Darr spent Thursday night and Friday with her son and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Darr of near Goshen. Mr. Darr called Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Disher are now at home on the late James Myers farm and on Thanksgiving they entertained company from Fort Wayne and Milford. Mr. and Mrs. LaTone Jenson had as their Thanksgiving company Mr. Jenson’s sister and brother of Syracuse and Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Darr and two Children of near Goshen called at the home of their parents, Geyer and Darr Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Crist Darr called at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Rob Chilcote of Milford, Sunday. Mrs. Irene Disher was a Milford caller Sunday afternoon. AFRICA. - Thanksgiving day dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Saidla were: Mr. and Mrs.' Harvey Saidla of Elkhart; Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Ruby of Fort Wayne; Will Ruby of Crom.vell; Mr. and Mrs. Jim Sharp, Mr. and Mrs. Vivian Sharp of North Webster. Those who enjoyed pot luck dinner in the Jonas Cripe home Thursday were: Mr. and Mrs. Will Shock, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Stamats of Warsaw; Mr. and Mrs. Noah Shock and daughter Velma of Ligonier, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Brown of Indian Village, Mr. and Mrs. Milo Miller and daughter Corlynn of Syracuse, Stanley Miller of North Webster; Mr. and Mrs. Fredric Kuhn, Maurice Dorsey, Mr. and Mrs. Orval Shock and son Argil, Mr. and Mrs. Elmo Shock and family. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kline and Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Saidla spent Thursday evening in the Jim Sharp home. Mr. and Mrs. Hiram Ferverda spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eli Shock and family. Jonas Cripe and Elizabeth Shock visited Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kolberg Sunday afternoon. . Mr. and &rs. Elmo Shock and family, Mr. and Mrs. Fredric Kuhn Mr. and Mrs. Will Kuhn and Maurice Dorsey were Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Allen Gordy and Emmett Gordy. Mrs. Eli Shock assisted Mrs. Fred - Kline with cooking for wood buzzers Friday. Mrs. Fred Kline spent Saturday fternoon with Mrs. Elmo Shock. ZION. Mike Kuniff of Mishawaka, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Smith and family and Arnold LeCount spent Thanksgiving with Mr. and Mrs. EmoryGuy arid Mrs. Ida Guy. Mrs. Lewis Plew and family of Warsaw and Mrs. Ringwait spent Thanksgiving with Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Miller and family and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Nicolai. Mr. and Mrs. Eston Clayton and family enjoyed supper with Mr. and . Mrs. Fred Hinderer of Syracuse > ihursday evening. ' Miss M-rylin Mil er spent Tuesday >f this week with Mr. and Mrs. Emory Guy. DISMAL . Mr. and Mrs. Milton Bitner and .Howard and Herahel Bitner enterained th* following guests* at a turey and chicken dinner on Thanksgiving day: Mr. Blittes of Mishawaa; Mr. >nd Mrs. Kay Brownbridge and children of South-Bend; Harold wite and two children of Jgonier • and Roy Wilkinson and .ife. In the afternoon Raymond jitner and wife and four children oined them. Ray Wilkinson, wife and two children spent Thanksgiving with ne Ist Jut's parents, Mr. and Mrs. ■ oss o| Churubusco. Mrs. Wilkinon and children remaining until Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Lung enterained a number of relatives and riends at a Thanksgiving dinner. About forty neighbors and friends a'.kered at the home of Mr. and Lee Lung Monday night to re-
mind Mr. Lung of his birthday, I giving him a complete surprise. A social time was enjoyed with apples and popcorn. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Bickel of Goshen and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bunger of Benton had their annual Thanksgiving dinner at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Clell Buchtel. The ladies being sisters. Arthur Buchtel and family of Middlebury were guests of Jas. Buchtel and wife and W. Gants and wife Thanksgiving. Dora Clingerman and wife were guests at the Dean Carlson home on Thanksgiving day. Other guests were Judge A. Simpson and two sons of Goshen. CONCORD Burton Howe and wife had 'as their guests Sunday: Warren Colwell and wife and Mrs. Minnie Hamman of Sylvania, O. M. Smith and wife of Michigan spent a few days at the Earl Hamman home. Messrs and Mesdames James Laurance and Lloyd Dewart and Guy Fisher spent Sunday afternoon at the Ralph Beiswanger home. Lloyd Dewart and family, Ralph Godschalk and daughter Nancy Joe enjoyed Sunday dinner at t|ie Guy Fisher home. - Floyd Brower and family enjoyed Thanksgiving day at the home of George Strieby and Marie LeCount. Those who enjoyed fine turkey dinners at the James Dewart home were John Roop, Ernest Mathews and wives, Lewis Thomas, Jacob Bucher, wife and son Wayne, daughter Yvonne and Miss Mildred Troup. Chauncey Coy and wife spent Monday at the Dewey Coy home. Chauncey Hibner and wife enjoyed Thursday evening at the Marie LeCount home. Shermon' Deaton, wife and Bell Strieby spent Thursday evening at > the James Dewart home. Burton Howe and wife had as their guests Thanksgiving day, Earl Hamman and family and Mrs. Alice Lindsey. Laurence Dewart and wife spent, Thursday evening at the Ernest Mathews home. , Ernest Mathews and wife spent Sunday with Orvil Neff and wife. Guy Fisher and wife spent Sunday evening with Lawrence Dewart. TIPPECANOE Mrs. J. Garber called on Mrs. Chas. Bigler Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Mock assisted Stanley Morehead at butchering Tuesday. Mrs. May Billings of Elkhart is visiting her Aunt, Mrs. J. Garber for a few days this week-.
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Specials for Saturday All Items Cash SUGAR, 10 POUNDS, 43c With SI.OO order of Groceries not including Flour. CALUMET BAKING POWDER, 1 lb 25c PEARS, 17c can; 2 cans 30c oxrnrTn FOR PANCAKES, ~~~ bYRUP, 25c BOTTLE LUCKY STRIKES, 2 pkgs. ClGAßETTES,chesterfield, CAMELS, 25c SILVER KING, DOG FOOD, 3 TEN CENT CANS, .... 25c SODA CRACKERS, 2 lb box 19c CATSUP,ISc bottle 13c SOUP BEANS, 4 pounds 17c MOTHER’S OATS WITH COOKING CHINA 28c Over a Half-ton of Fresh Christmas Candies Special Prices to Teachers and Hack Drivers -CHRISTMAS TREES— Seider’s Grocery
Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Kline made a business trip to Cromwell Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Bigler and son Ray took dinner Thursday with Virgil Mock and family. , Mr. and Mrs. J. Garber and ifoyal Kline made a trip to Elkhart Friday. Wayne White and family had dinner Thursday with George White and family. Hugh Warstler and family visited at the Daniel Eberly home Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. J. Garber, Royal Kline and Mrs. J. L. Kline called on Brent Koher Wednesday. Afien Gordy assisted Chas. Richcreek shredding Thursday. Albert Gilbert and sister Elnora called at the J. Garber home Thursday. Jessie Baugher took dinner with her sister, Mary, Thursday. Elmo Shock and family took Sunday dinner with Allen and wife. A INJURES HAND ' ' Richard Mench’s hand was injured by a punch press while he was as work at Wilt’s Tuesday. Three of his finger nails were removed in the accident.
Grieger’s FANCY GROCERIES Phone 15 Free Delivery CA S H OLEO, 2 Pounds, - — fczW SUGAR 4 q BUTTER, PER POUND f COFFEE, IQ** KASPER, lb. iVV Postum, 91 r INSTANT, large pkg -4* IV Grape Nuts COCOA NUT, PACKAGE — AVV Soap Chips, BABY STEWARD, 2 pkgs LETTUCE, 1C 2 HEADS for Ivt COME IN AND GET OUR J MEAT PRICES OYSTERS FRESH FISH WE NOW HAVE CHRISTMAS TREES and CANDIES Get your sugar tickets at GRIEGER’S Sugar winners last week were: John Auer, Jake Kern, Millard Hire, Jesse Rex, Helen Jeffries.
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