The Kershaw gazette. (Camden, Kershaw Co., S.C.) 1873-1887, March 25, 1874, Image 1
early
of a de
anj household. The
^ each robbery ye re
? from
a gang of:
; htd {ifuMBDkn
piling containing an
of silver or jewels; nad
jpsaatea by threatening
i; mastered them, se
d them, than quiet
odioally to atrip the
all the valuables it contained,
i poaition filled me with anx
[y house ia six mi lea from town,
te centre of wide grounds, re
Jkoy habitation but the gar
"* at the gate. Both my
ff had-iaherited a large
of bulky family plate useless,
whioh never oame out of the safe.
imy own wishes been carried out,
ounce of silver mad every jewel
owned would hare been sent into
to my bankers', but my wife ob
d, laughed at my apprehenaions,
begged me not to worry.
But I continued to worry, and per
d myaelf with conflicting plana for
/, and one day while in town I
it to the head-quarters of the police,
' inquired for Betts, the detective
on this case.
n By-the-bye," said he, after we had
ked a few moments, "how many
warrants haxe you, Mr. Powers ? Please
toll me about them individually."
I went oyer their names, and the de
tective checked them off in hia memo
* wandum-book as I gave the facta con
nected^ with them. Saunders, the
butler, had been with us seventeen
years; the cook,, five years ; coachman
and groom, *eren; and the ohamber
maid, three?all fixtures in the house
hold but Marie, my wife's maid, who
! bad come within the last four weeks.
1 Ah 1" exclaimed Betts, " where did
at Marie ? Was she well reoom
to this country with s family
I of D? Starges. She was
a child who died on the
was thus thrown ant of
nployment; she advertised, and my
ifa saw her, liked her, ana engaged
? ." Did yon see her former employers ?"
fr',i Yes ; both De Sturges and his wife
?chatty, agreeable people, of some
means, apparently, and are going to
?attic in New Orleans."
" Desariba her, if *ou pleais," said
Betts, with a Keen interest, whioh sur
prised me.
"Maria is small, blaok-eyed, black
haired, compactly built, with remark
ably neat hands and feet She has a
cy, laughing face, and her hair is
__ rt, crisp, and early."
PsUs laughed uneasily, then bent his
hand, his elbow reding on
' /*l*fr. Powers;* ,?id he at laat, look
ing up with a pocuK. flash in his eyes,
I am going to take you into my oon
jtdenc<v but yon must be OU^re^t, or
k will Tuin me. I've sworn w Wfl
i thing through, or resign my poai.
ion. Im sick of this infernal foolery
' of oalltag myaelf a detective and letting
reign night and day all over the
The newspapers drive ma mad !
know nothing abdut the obstacles
contend with,_ and goad us into
steps, whioh oost us our
tnd end In failure. I've
g ia* the dark these nine
by Heavens^. I believe
line a glimmer of light."
indicated intense exoite
ls oame ?patmodioally,
and he had to^d raw
time^abross his
on. Then
opened it
? -j ? *>
/began, look
smil*, " fire
the 1mt eix
has these speoial
_ig it m the work
the other four :
ation of seven to
adroit burglars;
house is attacked,
orision for a
, J, the thieve*
I fourth, the leader
a amall ruan. of active
iriXlwoioo.1
ad rit me.
>w there was a reoog
___ from hi* desk.
?Ms the full teeti
i. Ben your ere
se*that the general
This small MMMi
l?da everybody.
no woman ha* the
?4ftoluiow
to suit. As,
Fof the thieve* 1
I before. At
? built into the
la the wainscot
s???
mMokbilbr
flrf *
<vT \
7'tTLFT,
clevergafttoMr; atthePratta', aprotege
Mr. Po*A." oo 11 tinned Betts, bringing
bis hand heorily down upon the knee,
"ItmiMdy to a wear tha* yom b?re
this dangerous inmate under your own
roof in th# ohsrseter of jour wife's
maid."
1 started as if Ihad been abot.
*'But, Betts, admit that though I am
an old fool, my wife is a thorough wo
man, and, aa a rale, ? aspects all her
own sex, yet she is positively fond of
Marie.".- ... ^ v. ^ '
- "Marie is a olsver little pass.
Wherever she has lived, as man or wo
man, the whole family hare adored her.
I hare always thought," he went on,
with a sort of cbuokle, "that no faot
about woman is more damning than
that the good ones are, as a rule, the
dull ones. Put spirit, sparkle, intel
lect, into any one of them, and she is
certain to play the deuoe. Has Marie
shown any interest in these burg
laries?"
There oould he no doubt of her hav
ing questioned me oonoerning them
with intense eagerness, and if I spoke
to my wife about my apprehensions
while she was present, Marie never lost
a word.
"Does she know about your silver ?
Has she charge of your wife's dia
monds?"
I started. That very morning I had
shown her my safes behind a false
book-case in my study, and asked her
opinion whether anyone oould mistrust
those innooent-looking enelyolopedias,
or suspect the ezistenoe of a closet six
feet square between my room and the
library."* I was ashamed of my own
greenness, but made a clean breast of
it to Betts, who was good enough to re
frain from expression of his opinion of
my disoretion.
"My word for it," he cried, "she has
been waiting to find out that secret, and
now she will leave your house lAthin
forty-eight hours. Her pretext will be
a reasonable one, sad she will promise
sh? do?? return she
bring he? gang at her heelk to rob
your house for you."
Thfl idea of connecting our jrifetty
Marie with suoh outrages filled me with
horror. I rejeoted it strenuously.
"Whom did you see in town?" in
quired my wife when I returned.
"Don't speak of it," said I, looking
fearfully about, as if the walls had
ears, "but I was with Betts, the detec
tive. You must not repeat what I say,
Marie."
" Never, monsieur I" oried Marie.
"The faot is," I pfooeeded, sinking
my voioe in to a sepulohral whisper,
" that gang of masked burglars have
been traced to New Orleans, and may
be arreeted by this tims."
" Then I hope, dear," said my wife,
laughing, " that you will again sleep
soundly in your bed. After you got up
last night for the fourth time to prome
nade about, pistols in hand, I decided
it might be better to eat off pewter and
wear French gilt jewelry than to lead
such a life."
I too laughed, and stretched out my
legs comfortably. " Yes, I mean to
like a Christian hereafter; be
sides, I bdve brought home a dog."
"A dog !" exclaimed Marie, startled.
" Yes. T turned and looked at her
attentively. " Don't you llk? dogs ?"
She protested that she loved dogs
better than anything in the world ; and
when Jingle, the spaniel, was prodaoed
it was. so pretty a aight to see her play
ing with him that I was freshly in
oensed with Betts for putting his cursed
suspicions into my head. She took the
little beast to bed with her, I believe,
and next morning he would obev her
lifted finger.
That vary day she received a letter
from Madame l>e Sturgea, bar former
miatreaa, aaking her to oome and pans a
few honrn with her before she left for
New Orleans. Marie oarried the letter
to Mrs. Powers. " Madame wishes to
talk to me abent Mile. Helene," plead*
ed the girl, with tears in her eyes.
" To-moirow will be the birthday of
the panvre ange, who lie* at the bottom
of the oroel sea. . -
" Poor Madame De Rtnrges," ex
olaimed my wife, tonohed at the
thought of the sorrowing mother ; "yon
mnst spend to morrow with her, Marie.
Oo in at nine o'clock and oome baek at
Meanwhile I had telegraphed Marie's
proposed movements to Rett*, and now,
with tome nervousness, awaited events
The detective had warned me that she
would win the dog'a affections ; that
she wonld leave the house promising to
return, but would not return. Two of
these predictions were already verified ;
but if Marie oame back I could laugh
at . his suspicions, and regard them as
futile.
nut Marie did n6t return at five
o'clock; a telegram arrived in her
stead from Madame De Starves, saying
thai she had kept the girl, and would
writ* at length and explain. Mast
morning % letter was received from that
B. She told my wife she was ill, jet
ted to travel: homesick in a strange
,' without a familiar woman's face
hen and that she fc?4 persuaded,
forced, Marie to rem An and set
| 4*t trHh Mr end he> husband for Mew
that very evening. Am ?n
r-botisd notelmm Mi
thie* filed with protei
at the neceesity.4>f thus
to Belts thai
-law'e
and after lmtiagkit
down, eager to see the
wu on the stroke of twelve i
tered the office, and t thought at first
HtttBelts had failed me, for no one
lMM^MS but a ponderous old gentle
man with gold gUasas and white aide
whiskers. I am not used to intrigues
and masquerade*, and when I recog
nised Belts in this cBbgwlse I could
hardly refrain from exclaiming at his
olevernese ; but his own ooolnasa kept
ma within bounds, and I sat down bo
side him, and began reading my paper.
Presently, he edged toward me, and
dropped these sentenoes into my ear:
"It's all going beautifully?I followed
the girl in yesterday?Went to?hotel?
The De Sturgeses booked there all
straight?Whole party left Jersey Oity
at nine o'clook last night, ticketed ana
luggage checked to Washington?Slip
pea out of the cars st Newark, all three
in men's dress, and were back here be
fore midnight?Met eight fellows I
know at a saloon in ? street, snd I can
spot all eleven of 'em this very minute
?They're at a den in ? street, getting
ready to play their little game some
where to-night."
"At my house ?" I cried.
He shook his head.
"Dunno," said he, looking straight
into the fire.
"Look here, Betts," I whispered,
"this may be fun to you, but though
I'm no ooward, i!is death to me. Why
not arrest 'em now ?"
"Tea, just so," he returned, irritably
?"why not ? Where's your evidence?
Now, Mr. Powers, just look at this mat- j
ter sensibly. You know as well as I do
thatliiif the thieves we catch get off be
cause nocne will swear to their identi
fy at their examination. Now I'm
anxious to make a sure thing of it for
once, and take my oath that I caught
them in the act." * J
"Ton mean to arrest them while they
are robbing me?"
"I do." . * I
"?11 right?only I. should prefer to
have the row in another man's house."
K"'. ' 1 -*?*- -*? nnlnt/w nl had
gone down
Jus oontempt, and went on tell me that
lie had nsf stphed one off tti m;
Johnson by name, to my plaoe to make
a reconnaissance, under pretense of
trimming my evergreens. Upon this
man's report, and upon two or three
other open questions which he did not
.think it worth while to explain, de
pended his programme for to-night. If
by any possibility there wae a likeli
hood of my house being entered at
once, I was to know it by dinner-time,
that I might be prepared for the burg
lars. I was meantime to go home qui
etly, and spend my time in my usual
manner, so as to exoite no comment
among the servants, and, receiving no
word from Betts, I was to rest satisfied,
and oonsider my house safe for another
twenty-four hours.
I went home aooording to directions,
and set about spending my day in my
usual way, but the house was so still,
and seemed so deserted, I found it im
possible to read, even to sit quietly in
a ohair, for more than five minutes at a
time. So I called the little dog, Jingle,
and set out for a walk about the grounds,
feeliDg some ouriosity to get a glimpse
of the detective, Johnson.
I beard the sound of an axe through
the sombre stillness, and Jingle frisked
, forward and barked st a man hacking
at the firs in the shrubbery. I addressed
him regarding his woik, and he winked
back hi', appreciation of our mutual
sharpneaa ; then I weat on, reconnoitred
a few minutes longer, and again turned
in.
Uinuor-time oame, and brought with
it a semblance of ooeupation, and when
I wrk? half through my meal T suddenly
renumbered Jingle, and sent for him to.
kaep me eompany. He vaa not in the
house. It flashed upon me that I had
rot seen him after passing Johnson in
the thieket, and I dispatched the ooach
ruan to call him in ; bat only cohoes
inswered the ory. He had evidently
re gained out in the grounds with the
polioeman, and I dismissed the snbjeot
from my mind, finished nay dessert, and
went back to my library fire. No word
had oome from Betts, henoe I was safe
for to-night, a* all areata, and I breathed
freer, and atretohed my legs and dosed
attti! ten o'clock i^ comparative oom
fert... Then, rousing myself, I lit a lan
tern and weak out the door and along
the aide piaraaa to speak a word with
Johnson, who, Beits haa arranged, waa
in any ease to keep a watoh under the
covered carriage-way.
He wm not iK&re. I did not under*
stand it Had he got drunk, or had
Betts taken him away ? Perhaps, how
ever, he waa still loitering at the edge
of the grounda ; accordingly, I walked
out on the lawn, and swung my lantern
two or thrae timea. Then, aa it waa
bitter cold, and waa beginning to enow,
I turned in, and finding that it waa al
moet eleven o'clock, I ordered fiaandeta
to eloee the houae and aaad the ear-,
vanta to bed, and to b?d I want
But aa soon aa the light waa out, and
my head touched the pillow, I waa
freahly impreeaed by the myatary of
Johnson'* diaappAarano*. an.l ar*v>rd'
tngly I got up, opened say pi-tol-aaae,
took out two rw-rolvera. an?fc pnttinff
them and a sword cane within eaay
roach, | returned to bad.
. * Denca take this suapense ! ** aaid I.
a# I again lay down *1 ahan't aleep a
wink/* But after toenfug a few iimea.
1 waa ai
'?aid
one of them, in a
to pat on that those
slippers. Ton shall M^Hnwd in
the least if yon will auB^kt and
obey directions." pistols
simed square in his eye^Hgf man will
be docile, I suppose : aflj^HK I got up,
and put on dressing-gb^^M-slipperi.
Then one of the men ioflp^tir arms,
drew them behind, aadflMled them:
another fragged me wiHill of my own
silk handkerchiefs * attMOi rendered
harmless, I was led dc^HHtfrs, where
mj household, in ra4pto stages of
night attire, gagged arftied back to
back, were awaiting MibiXhe dining
room. I was put in aajwnn-chair, and
fastened to it by feet ?|d hand*, then
was left alone to stare ?n?t me.
Maddened, desperate fcough I was,
when I discovered thaAiRie mxth of the
frisoners was JohneettiOie detective,
recognised him wijth f keen sense of
the ridiculous, and only wished that
Bett^? whom I was mentally anuthema
tizing with curses noi-Igad but deep?
were in his plaos, an#lasting some of
our humiliations. , ?
Besides the three masked men who
had mastered me and brought me
down, there were five others Ija the
dining-room. Two -mere left as sen
tinels ovsr us, and the Mat at once fell
to work in a way thai mean* business.
A small, active man (was it our Marie?)
motioned toward the*sideboard! , It
was wheeled aside, and stepping for
ward, he pressed the Aiding panfcl, and
disclosed the oloset where tne silver in
daily use were kepi, and the shelves
were at once strip pad, and the contents
piled on the table. "8- ? *
The bedrooms Tp|rtrrfr- were next
visited, the locks of fhcawers and ward
robes wredchedHptftaQd the contents
thrown pell-mell <Mhe floor for the
ohief expert to deeMKa, what should
be oarried off. SMBmi rooms gut
ted, they same down with their spoils
with
it ______
my m* Ml
that fate was cruel to me. Only one
consolation illumined the blackness of
my despair?my wife had oarried her
jewels to town with her, and I was
spared the humiliation of telling her
I had lost them for her through' my
idiotio faith in Betts. There was a
long silenoe now, which I understood
but too well; it war followed by three
muffled explosions that shook the house
like an earthquake, and almost simul
taneously was neard the noise of a
scuffle, and I opened my eyes to see tho
room filled with polioemen, and hear
pistol-shots exchanged, while our two
sentinel* were thrown down, disarmed,
and pinioned beforf our eyes.
I looked and listened, mentally stun
ned, without dear comprehension of
the meaning of the uproar, for, with
the noise of the fire-arms, the elang of
manaoles, and the beat of heavy feet,
the tumult was somewhat Unifying.
In leas time than it takes me to de
scribe it, the situation had been re
versed, *nd now Betts, the deteotive,
appeared in the door at the head of his
posse of men, who brought in eight of
the captured burglars, two- of them
wounded and bleeding profusely, while
the rest showed signs of having main
tained a stout resistance ; all had lost
their masks in the melee, and disolosed
sullen and brutal visages.
" How are you, Mr, Powers t" in
quired Betts, ooming forward and Re
leasing me. " I hope yeu're not hurt
I beg your pardon for taking possession
of your house in this way."
Why did you mike me think I was
safe for to-nigbt, Betts ?"
" Because," he replied, with a shrug,
441 discovered you were just a little
upset at the prospect, and I felt afraid
of you." He ran his eye over the group
beside me, and when he ssw Johnson,
he grinned, snd going up to him,
knocked his manacles off " You're a
pretty detective, you are," ssid he, " to
be caught and tied up by the very fel
lows you were in waiting for I"
Still, Betts was in too high good
humor to be angry even with the hu
miliated Johnson. Meanwhile I was
peering into the face* of the thieves,
fearing to find Marie among them.
?? Betts, "I gasped, suddenly, "you
haven't got theiittle one." -
He gave a tigerish cry, and glared
from one to the other of his prisoners.
*' You are sure there was another ?"
M Wo doubt of it," I returned ; " any
one of these felloWs is four Inches taller
than the leader of the gang."
In another moment he had set pioked
men at work sesrehing both houses and
grounds ; but he fever succeeded in
finding even a traee of the eleventh of
the party of burglars. Nor even after
the ooimetion and heavy sentence of
the other tea, would aay one of them
confess the secret of their leadership,
f had easily identified M. and Madame
Pe Bturgee?both swarthy and rebust
Frenchmen snaongthem, but in spite
of ftU aay sgbrt* nei&er one could
acknowledge
irdbf such ft person
they ha# eVer mas
di*t.
off in >fhe
' A Touching Case.
The Indianapolis Journal announces
the death, at the Hotel Bates, of Thomas
Lt. Salisbury and Ellen E. Salisbury,
hie wife, the former having died on
Monday, and the latter on Saturday
evening. 'Some of tha* circumstances
attending the death of these two most
amiable and exoellent persona were not
only very touching, but rather extra
ordinary They formerly resided in
St. Louis, and while there were called
upon to mourn the loss of two fine
children, their sole family, who were
lost together while skating near St.
Louia. They were a young lady aged
eighteen, and a ^iad of fifteen. They
were drowned on the 21st of February,
1864, precisely ten years before the day
of Mrs. Salisbury's death.
Thia double affliction almost broke
their hearts, and henoeforth they lived
for each other alone, oonoealing their
great grief as those only can understand
who have been similarly bereaved.
Naturally congenial and devoted to
each other, their lives grew more clot ely
together by reason of the hard provi
denoe which at one dispensation had
removed both their darlings from their
sight without a word of parting or
warning. When Mr. Salisbury was
taken sick, his wife watched at his bed
tide with sleepless affection. Day and
night she ministered to his wants, till
it was feared her own frame, never very
strong, would wholly give way. About
twenty-four hours before his death,
finding him able to oonverse a little,
she asked him if he knew her. He saia
yes, and smiling called her name. To
her inquiry if he was willing to die, he
said yes. She said, " Thomas, you
want to go and see the ohildren, do you
not?" He answered, "Yes." Then
she said, "Thomas, I will follow you
soon ; you wait for me, I will oome
very soon." From thai moment ahe
evinced no more anxiety about her hus-.
band. She seemed to regard his death
as certain, and her own as soon to fol
low. Yielding to the advioe of friends
she rose and bade him good-bye. Im
after bis death, ahe took to
to sink rapidly. No
...
or v imrrppoeSe
did what he oould, but
that wholly baffled his art. Her malady
waa of a kind that no human remedy
oould reach. The gentle lady was en
tirely resigned to her situation, and
seemed to oontemplate her approaching
death with composure. During the
week she steadily sank until it was ap
parent that her end was near. On Sat
urday evening, a short time before her
death, her friends were startled to see
her faee illuminated by a bright smile.
It beamed with a light that never shone
on sea or land and told of unspeakable
ioy. Her eyes gazed into distanoe and
her hands moved as if to welcome some
one. A solemn stillness fell upon the
bystanders, and the thought struok all
that she was greeting her ehildrfen.
From that moment the lady neither
spoke nor moved, but sank away and
passed from mortal life with the same
eloquent smile upon her face. She
kept her engagement with the husband,
and followed soon after him to oomplete
the family circle in the land of the
hereaftar.
The Next State.
New Mexico- applies at the family
door for admission into the Union an a
State. Comparatively little seems to
be known of this territory, its fertility,
its resources, and people, by the
average reader. Its geographical posi
tion, distance from the settled portion
of the other States, and inconvenient
and nnoomfortable modes of pnblio
travel render it almost inaooessihle to
the modern traveler, and its world in
nearly a sealed book to the people be
yond its limits. She has an area of
about 400,000 square miles, and claims
a population of 112.000. She main
tains also that her ability for self-snp
port is well established, npon the
Sound that, while all the other terri
ries have, at some time during their
territorial existence, appealed to
charity for bread to feed their famish
ing inhabitants, or relief from pesti
lenoe or Are, New Mexioo, besides hsv
iog an abundance for her own people,
has always had a surplus more than
sufficient to supply the army in New
Mexioo and Arisoaa with breadstuffs
and forage. The people are affirmed
to be law-abiding, industrious, thrifty,
and frugal, hospitable and genesous;
conservative in financial affairs^ slow
to oontraot debts, and willing to jaake
sacrifices to pay themi It la further
urged that sinoe the adoptfpn of the
Federal Constitution fifteen new HAlla
hate been admitted, Aach having V
population of less than 85,000, ami one
of the number less than B5,000, while
the atvraga of the whole MWto was
about 62,000. ^Lence she cotflndor*
there is no principle of right or Justice
upon whieh she oanbe laager iefn?*d
'admission into the Union.
? Tn Cost.?President Buohham,
Vnrmoht University, says he finds of
careful inquiry Chat a young ma
f ing osll?gc free from, debfe and
good pee of his vacakioi?
money from time to tiUfci
lt,n?di.o?b? mot. tbm ?,
??*!
*
A Morning Hjmp.
To Thee, let my first off wing /is?
Whose son creates the day,
Swift m its inflosaos cleaves the skies.
And spotless ss its ray. m
Throughout this day Thy hand be nigh ;
Preserve me ss before ; 9
Still lead, snd all my wants supply,
Thou, whom I e'er sdore. - *
Thy blissful providence impart.
In bounteous mosaure Lord; ,
With gratitude imbue my heart.
While I peruse JThy Word.
Afflictions, should Thy lore bastow,
In chse*isement for sin,
Patient I'll bear the KtnMtlng hNw?
Thy goodness, still will hymn.
This day, whste'sr my vwring fate.
Some virtue let me gain,
That Heaven to me s low estate
May uot have lent in vain.
Be this and svery future day
More holy th%n the past.
That, treading in thy chosen way,
I may reach Homf at Iwt!
? Luthsr Q. Rioos.
Items of Interest.
As tor owns only 700 houses.
Look beyond the clonds never de
spair. Ik?
The spoken word cannot again be
?wallowed.
When you die even your tomb shall
be oomfortable.
Better be upright with poverty, than
unprincipled with plenty.
He who weeps from his heart will
provoke tears from the blind.
Waste of wealth is sometimes re
trieved ; waste of health seldom ; waste
of time never.
There are 25,000 women in the Iowa
granges, each of whom is intrusted
with a vote.
The Census returns of North Carolina
show 1,848 George Washington! among
etloeik?I{ single life '
__ to" reason that ;
? twice as
Throw life into a method, that every
hour may bring its employment and
every employment have its hour.
Schoolmaster?" What is nothing ?"
Boy?" It is when a man asks you to
hold his horse, and jus^ says, * Thank
i you.' "
\ The Laramie Sentinel, printed six
, hundred miles west of Omaha, says that
the people there laugh at and ridicule
the idea of Indian troubles.
In a meeting of Chicago" saloon Jjeen
; ers one of them argued their immense *
political power " because all the poli
I ticians frequent drinking plaoes."
" Napkins, s;r ! napkins 1" roared a
Green Bay landlord; "no, sir, we
haven't got any, but if you want to wipe
your nose I'll lend you my handker
chief I"
The ice gathered on the Kenebeo
river this season is estimated at 280,000
tons, and it is expeoted that as much.'
more will be cnt before the season
oloses.
Be not stingy of kind words and
pleasing acts for ffnoh are fragrant gifts,
whose perfume will gladden the heart
aad sweeten the life of all who receive
tbem.
A little American lad who had just
oommenoed reading newspapers asked
his father if the word " Hon.," prefixed
to the name of a member of Congress,
meant "honest."
The Oalifornians have been telling ns
for many years that Donner Lake on
the Sierra Nevadas'was fathomless.
But now they have found bottom all
over it, and the greatest depth is 200
feet.
The people in a town in Iowa wanted*
a flouring mill, and finally they got it ^
i and they are very anxious to have ?"*?
bank established SO* thpt they can hoi*
row money to buy four. Nothing like
having everything harilj.
Country Practitioner (Sbout to g?,?p
to London on business) I shan't be
more than ten days at .Ike furtliwff, Mr.
Fawoeps. You 11 visit Tneyj)ati<
regularly, and take ease thl **
'em slip through your
well?-during my
Milwaukee brewer#
cannot be manufact
910 per barrel so long
present prices* They say
man o factored of
of |8 a barrel, and that bre
poorest business that "a
invest in. ^ ^
A Georgia
ft
years old.
her tfom the