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rriaay, January i-t, xvzx. * ; - - ?i 31AV CAUSE A SMILE. %*j * B ; O O90699B' Walter Irritated.?It is, perhaps, unnecessary to give the name of the New England city which is the resi deuce, of the lad who figures in this story, j There had been a visitor and to this .lad she said: "And so ihis is little Walter? 3fy, my! What a big boy you've grown to be- I wouldn't have believed it possible". "Mother", said Walter when the; visitor had gone, "doesn't it pass your j comprehension how persons in whom i 11.. I one wouia naiuratiy cai/ccl au kjx ui i nary degree of intelligence appear to i believe, all history and nature to the j contrary, that the children of their! acquaintance will always remain in- j fants and persist )n expressing sur-j prise when they observe the perfect-j ly natural increase in one's stature?" Satisfied.?"I understand", "remarked Mr: Callahan to his friend Mr. I Cooney,'tfce Judge fined ye ten'; dollars for assaultin' Couchlin the j ! I other day". j j "lie did", answered Mr. Cooney, "an j it was a proud moment. Til tell ye, j whin I heard the sintince". j "How's that"? V 'Tm thfnkih'" rontinued Mr. Coon-11 j i ey, "Ihot it showed which o? us had., the best of the fight'.' |, * T ' ? ?? n rnTT l ? J>SSy to I? 001 -C 1H??nu iuiuc j ; to Ret that gang of city fellers to cornc ! out and spade up your farm?" in-f J quired vClem Joter of the grizzled ok' , J farmer. "When I drove by they was!' . * a-spadin' all oyer the piaec". "Well, I wasn't feelin' like worMn'* , njyseTf", replied the S. o. f., "so I sorta ) insinuated down at the postoffice! t'other day. that I had seen a feilei iJ burying something that looked like a I gallon of lioker tuther night?" * j j "rii ' (hfv 1 , { Real Conrersr,? kji i;uu i ot swindled me outrageously in Paris,: but I'll say tbaf they'were mighty uc.ite about it". j "Yes, they are a courteous people". "One chgp. especially, 'th? v/crst ' bandit of the lot?he was very bt'sy,' 1 *? * h'"o timn , but took twenty m in ui.es ui ?uo ? , helping Tre look up words in my ens- 1 lishrFrench dictionary, so that I co'sld .1 tell him Just what I thought of hi?n". f * ; ! -V" ,I1 Ifired property.?" say, ; Seetfium, this, is an infinitely better 1 proposition than the little Tattling ma- 1 chine you had last year'\ ; * . ' < Farmer Seedlum?'"But it ain't". i :n)ine, i!r. Rendix; I aint got no car j *"* "- mKMili'no ni] ftny more, ducd . 4^*^, ^.., an'tires got so plum high. I just 1 couldn't afford keepin' no car. This ' 'ere new one belongs to Jackson, rr.y ' hired man". , Amw1canfzi?? Hirnr?In an Ameri- ' canization class in one of our Iar^e ' cities, ArchiUes Eonglis, a Greek, fifty |.J years Okl, was called upon to recite ' the oath of allegiance, :?.nd did so} promptly:' i ' j1 "I pledge allegiance to our Hag and: i the I?epuWicans. for which it stands".' r-Ufe. ' *' jl ' " 11 Xarfyr of Her ^onTkHon.?"Alice", j v observed Myotic, "has suffered mt:cb j lor hsr belief". .* ; "Indeed?" asked Millieent, lifting 3 her eyebrows . iii ^ polite curiosity.! "What is her belief?" j 1 "That she can -wear a number four j shoe on a number six foot", was the , j eniel reply of Myrtle. j , \l4 Retrenching.?"'Everything's too' , high", exelaimed the corner Cobacco-1 nist. "A few years ago we could af-l 1 forcS to put out chromos cf Ethel Bar- j ' rymore and Jim Jeffries with a pack j 1 of cigarets. "Well, they've cut out ths; pictures now, and how's a kid going1. to get an education?" j; Nice Old "Lady^?"Will you kindly | tell me if the lady who writes "Thej Mother's Page every week is in. I: want to tell her how much I have en- j joyed reading her articles on 'The ik Evening Hour in the Nursery'." Office Boy?"That's him over there with the pink shirt, smoking a pipe". How He Gained Confidence.?PurdJ Long went to Missouri in an early! day, established a bank, and made a! lot of money. He is now counted j among the state's richest citizens. \ . Asked by a friend, how he ever had j the nerve to start a bank . in such j a backwoods country as he located in, he replied: "Well, sir, I just rented a: room, stuck up a sign 'Bank' and: n-oitori for results. The very first day j a man came along and deposited $100. | The second day another man dropped j in and left $r?00. Another man put in $300 and blamed if I didn't get. somej confidence in the thing and put in $."00 j of my own money".?-New York Eve ning Post. i Uncle ,, ,|ia, CC^.Tf MATCHMAKING' i<TVTOW that Miss Favorite is com i.^1 ing to spend a few days wit! us, I think I'll invite Charles Ausustu Terwilliger to dinner." said 'Mrs jamesworuny. "i xzave anvu.vs uiuu^ii they were intended for each other, an< they si inula h' ? nounced failure Every time you see an old maid yoi turn green with envy, and you hav< told me a million times that a woma: sacrifices her liberty and independ ence the minute she inveigles a mar to the altar, and vows to love, cherisl and protect him. You.have said in inj nroconfo thaf sninster is the Olll^ : w? ? woman who is her own boss. "It doesn't take the ingenuity of ? Sherlock Holmes to deduce from youi remarks that you consider matrimony a total loss. Why, theft, Mrs. James worthy, are you forever trying to he ?uile your friends into that conditioi of misery? Of course, you can't plain; neither'can any woman explain Matchmaking just ' comes natural t< ill of you. , "When I am looking for ail kinds ol plain and fancy trouble, I'li begin matching up the young men and woman .of my acquaintance. Eut not until [ am suffering for an invoice of grief [ might persuade my friends to invesl ' - 4 ??- ? ? 5-- ? ' ?? r\n f .\ni tn a western saver mine, ui un.v pcn.i-.ji rights ia a revolving churn, but you'll never see Elijah J&roes worthy boost Ing matrimony in your indiscriminate way. If two young people got marriec' through your ring generalship, ant they found that each had drawn a go'c brick, they would hate you as lonj as they lived, and would always snout :>?you as an old busybody with a nos? too long for legitimate purposes, tun' they'd make faces at you whenevei you met tliem on the street. "Do you ever think of your responsibility when you tvy to boom the or jnge blossom market? Dops it evei occur to you, at such times, that yoi are rushing in where angels fear.tc iread? "Now, just consider Sarah Jane Fa forite and Charles Augustus Terwil [iger, who will be railroaded to th< altar if you have your way. I adinii that they make a handsome pair Saraf* is a blonde with a png nose and Charles Augustus is a brunette with a nose like a Roman senator fhey afford a pleasing contrast. Bn appearances count for little, Mrs Tames Worthy, when the real cusitesi of married life begins. "Sarah has basked in the lap of lux ry all her days, and sho has the idee that money grows on vines like cii cumbers. I don't suppose she evei knew what it rcSans to need iifty cents or a dollar. When she wants anything she goes to the s'tore and gets it. an< lias it charged to her father. If then Ls one word in the dictionary she isn' familiar with, that word is retrench rmarif. "Charles Augustus on the othei hand, had hard sledding all througl his boyhood. As a result of his c-r perlence he has an ezaggsrated idea o! the value of a kopeck. He is the sor of man who will walk eight mile: through a thunderstorm rather thai cough up carfare. Whenever he part: with a nickel he has to fake a b'rcmo seltzer to steady his nerves. His rev erence for money increases every day and it will keep on increasing as lonj as he lives. T Tr/vni "Yet you, iurs. jarneswurmj, u .?vU, feeble-minded matchmaking enthusi asm, would use your vote and in flu ence to join these two people in th< holy bonds. Just take the advice o your swaybacked husband, and l<v such people work out their own des tinies, and everybody concerned wil be happier.** Takes Sail Behind Halibut. Uncle George Butler of Ellsworth Me., now in his eightieth year, lioofcec * a *113110111 wnne nsmug un wiw Ledge, and casting off his anchor rope which he had fastened with a toggle he enjoyed a sail about the bay, wit! the halibut for power. After a while the halibut got tired and Uncle Georg< hauled it in. It weighed 2<X> pounds. 4 Ancient Perfume. It seems strange to us today to r<y.i of saffron as a perfume; one of th< romances about it lies in the story r>: Hakluyt of a 'pilgrim smuggling, at tin risk of his lif?, from the Levant a heat of saffron in a hollow made in hi: staif. Both in a Cavity. rcifo?t firoriued into u. mllliuer; Opening today. Hub?And put me in a Jiole, I'll bed ?Boston Transcript. . J.J. F'WU U JIM ? ?> ?I'll "?.J WWII I 'I j DEFECT IS EXlSTiNG MAPS , 1 i That They Are ?vot Drawn to Uniform Scaie Is Felt to Be an Educational Handicap, j , ; It has Ions been tlie dream of geog i rashers to make .a mel ius of maps of j j the world on a uniform scale. Indeed, ! it is considered unfortunate for school I children that the geographies do not j i show all countries by maps on a } single, uniform scale, for unless a ! student observes very carefully the i ! figures showing Uie scale of each map i-; or the figures showing the area of the li j country mapped he is likely to get the s1 impression that certain distant lands, ?. j wnicn are generally inupiivu uu a. t! small scale, are smaller than those 3' with which he is most familiar. Take e ! Australia, for example: The maps in w the geographies now used in most of J our schools show it on a small scale? j I about'one-third as large as that used v i for the map of the United States; yet i j Australia is, in fact, nearly as large . i as the United States?only about onefortieth (21,'2 per cent) smaller. China . j is generally shown smaller in area . i than the United States, yet it is about . j one-third larger. k i xne avoi'k oi preparing msips ui mr 11 entire world on a uniform scale of one | to one million?that is, maps on which i one unit (any unit?inch, centiiheter, | millimeter, etc.) represents one million ; like units on the ground?has been j under way for several years, and the i United States geological survey, Dei partmont of the Interior, has made j considerable progress in its work 011 j the parts of this map that were asj signed to the United States. The | principle used in preparing these j maps, if addpted by the publishers of j SC11UUI UUiJft.9, Will gl>c II1TT vimuirii n\.~ 11 curate impressions of the relative . ! sizes of the countries of the worKl. A J WOULD PROHIBIT DOG-EATiNG i ! Custom Common Among the 12orot3 - | Is C'ecJared to Be Undesira!:'e . ! for Many Reasons. )! ? J Those who remember the article in i this magazine u short time r.jro tell i ; irig of the cruelties connected with . i the killing of dogs for food among the I Igo?ots, says Our Dumb Animals, . Avill be glad to know that it has t aroused .sufficient interest to cause the Manila Daily Bulletin to say, acl cording to a clipping we have just re-, celved: i' "The office of the Department of the I Interior is constantly receiving from j persons in the United States, mostly [ women, letters protesting against dogt eating in the mountain province - among the Igorots, it was declared by ; , Secretary Kalaw of the department. I Ali of them, he said, urge that in the * . interests of civilization and better i and higher mode of living, a law . should be. passed by the Philippine . : legislature prohibitfng the sale and . the use of dogs as food materia?, i | "Aside from the fact that the act , of eating dogs is highly undesirable, I the letters state, it is very inhumane. .; The Igarots, they state, like to eat . lean dogs and that the more bony ? they are, the more palatable they j. taste to the Igorots. Consequently, when a dog is bought in- the dog market at Baguio or at any other place, s if is left to starve for many days before it is eaten, the communicationsL ' iWIurp j "When asked if the passage of a law prohibiting the sale and the catling of dogs by the Igorots was in or.1 der, Secretary Kalaw declared that it t might be done in an indirect manner," : | FI RMAN STUDENT ^ISSIXG. ! , . . \ * ; Greenville, S. C., Jan. 9.?Leaving * Crccnviile on December 22, presunii ably for his home at Mayesville, S. C., c to siJend the Christmas holidays with . his widowed mother, Richard Fur man, p 121-year old student at Furman linit versity and member of the1 soplio more class, disappeared ;uid since that, f- time has given neither his mother ^ nor his friends here any cluev as to 5 his whereabouts. Later: The youn? man joined the > . ormy. J : J Xo Bard About 3ie Sings*. t . mmam-mrnm ; They say I am not feminine, r: They say' I have no charm, -: Because I am net scared of rats -j AiuV wish a snake r.n harm; 5 Besause I earn a living wage, j; I And gladly cast my vote; k Because I have the strength to ride |! And swim and row a boat; ; Bocause I do not fear the dark, But go along at night Whfrever need or pleasure calls; Because I claim the right * i For' man and woman both to be * j By equal standards judged; * j Because my heels are low and broad, ? j And lungs are n6t begrudged * j f % j A place in which to do their worlc? 5 J Because of all these things I'm not enshrined on pedestals, No hard.-about me S 11 gS. ?The State. 1 - $'">,000?000 i>or >ev<?y CfiHiIrm. 7 2 Washington, Jan. 8.?The American Red Cross executive committee has g | r / t j appropriated $.>,'.uu,?>uu irom iau ;?>cioty's reserve fund to carry out ils j program of furnishing desperately T! needed medical assistance for ehil^ i I <1 rt n in Europe. i | In making this announcement toJ ! night, Pt. Living; ion v\: ml. chair-j ' j iiinn ui lite ci'iitr::! committee oi' th:- : < ; Red f'ross, sttid ih'_* scope oi the so-1 | cieiy's relief operations* in Ihirope j | v.as being altered to the end that it ' ! might be confined almost entirely to | j this work. i * , , IhK COTMY JIA3 ! d>xlim:s lue.x.si: u! ? r ! The State. j Officials oi the motor vehicle divls- ! j ion oi the state highway department i ^ j are not usually superstitious, but they i j are practically in accord with a letter }j ; received yesterday from a well known ! ! citizen of Lee county, in which the ' j : citizen absolutely refuses to ha\c li- i ! ! j cense No. 13, which was given him j ' wV?nr> lm orinliofl (Viv f! 1flXl t2Z!" ; truca i' 1'*J^v* ^ ? - ? ? ^ "Times are hard enough now", j ( writes the i^ce county man. "I don't: j want them to get any worse wi-.li r.;e, I j so please let some one else have >?'o. j 13. It may be lu.-.ky for sime, b< 1 T 1 ^ don't want it". I DIVIDED OPINION SEST TO COUPLE, j : One Would Ha lip Tarheel Father of j Thirty-four Children. j Raleigh, X. C., Jan. 9.?Since nation, j ! n?V<K/>i?ir lioo lic.nn frivon t f? tfiP ' j V>IV4C IJ U*J XIVACJf iiuo wvvu ? v?? ?.? , j fact thai Reuben Bland, of Itoberson- j ville, Beaufort county, was the proud j father of 34 children, 3Ir. and Airs. 11 Bland have been deluged with letters j i from persons all ovex the I'nitcd! | States and Canada. I The letters arc from both women j j and men. Excerpts from a few of tho' ! letters follow: i A man in Ohio writes: "T road the' i story about your large family aloud f to my wife. 'There's n man who o"'?.ht j to I e given a medal", I loH her .1 nATfS-^ : BEST AGE ] j A man is as old as his organs; he j ! can be as vigorous and healthy at j 70 as at 35 if he aids his organs in j ; performing their functions. Keep j i your vital organs healthy with j COLD MEDAL j Hjtr i rnt fomsrV for ItidflCTi I J -i Lit' WU:ju o j ( | liver, bladder and uric acid troubles ! j since 1626; corrects disorders; stimulate^. j vita! organs. All druggists, three sizes. ; I r . _ | Lwok lot the ctjrie Go'd Medal on every box j sad &o iout&tiaa j? mm a ja *SB PSE ETC: ervw np ^ *S&i53 P 5& m p Efc&|? j Most of the pain we suffer is unnecessary. Why continue x , i to endure it?to sacrifice your youth, beauty, and enjoyment to it? The combination of simple harmless medicines found In i Br. M3es* Anti-Fciin Fills is especially effective in relieving pain without bad afterI e^cts. I For more than thirty-five ciifrorprc from headache. ijr va* J ^U4*v? v? w - - ? , neuralgia, backache, tooth- < ache, "sciatica and pains from other causes' have found reI N fief by taking these pills. Why don't you try them? ASK .YOUR DEUGC-XST j I \ Helped Fail ' > T' n j rr. r? ~su "airon, ulu us jdulu iju I cf Noren I . ? I * JT Is a well-known medical fact, that iron is a necessary constituent of the blood, and lhat blood lacking iron is ! the cause of many troubles that only iron ! will cure. rAmnrMinH nf trnn I I K/il) 64 va v? | i with Other valuable ingredients, is the | remedy to take when your blood needs j more iron, and your system requires a ! tonic. Ziron is mild and harmless, does I not stain the teeth, and is good for chil- ; dren as well as adults. i Air. P, Q. Gentry, of Norene, Tenn., I There's :i nmn who ought to be hanged'. s);(_ retorteu". I A writer in Oregon sent this: 'Reuben, Reuben. T am thinking. Ynu ;ir.> nnite niftv man. To your health J am drinking, fou have donp what few men can". | I From Xavarre, Ohio. Mr. Bland re- ' i :eived tins: "I'm the father of eight children i 2ii(i I have an awful time keeping j :hem in food and clothing. I've wor- j *ied a lot, but sines reading about i ? T mao V!<7rt T'm o >LiUr J-'lft liUliliV. I ii.ck, i m ?. , uckv guv". | . I ilOBirKKS LEAYK >*(;T A ('EXT IS THIS TiAMi.j Albany, CJa., Jan. 8.?Robbers last j light blew open the safe ana vault (he Eank of Sasser, a state bank j n a small town of that name between j \lbany and Dawson, in Tc-rrel county.! Practically everything, of value in j he vault and safe was carried away, ( ? j Ml STRENGTH| I i Albania Lily Was S::!: For Urea | Yc-si's, Sii&rmg Hernia i and Depressed?R-.cA Her Cv/a Story of Secoverj. ? r^.^_ ii- * r? r* ^ r L'OUiZ ivccir, ?x^xs. o. m. , of near hero, recently related the foi-! lowing interesting account cf her re- i covery: "1 v/ns in a v/e-ihehed con-: dition. I was sicl: three years in bed, j suffering a gre*': c? pain, Tveai:,' nervous, deprescei. i t.t.3 so wcc.!:, | I couldn't wall: serosa the fleer; just i bs-d to l?y and ny little ones tic the j work. i vr.'i air;est dead. i tried every thing I .heard of, and a number cf doctors. Still I didn't get any relief. I couldn't and slept poorly. Z believe if T hadn't heard of and taken Cardui I would havo d:ed. i bought; six bottles, after a neighbor told me j v.'Lat it did fcr I:cr. "I be^an to eat and Sico?, fcesan to j pain :i:-v strength and am rot/ well and strong. I iiaTen't Jia.:I any trouble s;:?ce ... I s>\v3 can testily to th3 peed that -Core-Mi did me. I don't think thera is a better tonic made and I believe it saved nay life." Tor over 40 years, thousands of rrcmen have emM Cardui successfully, in the treatment ct many vromaniy ailments. If you suffer as these women d!di t-\l-r. TJ- 'n5.v heln vou. too. I At dU druS2-Sc3.. E oa irlsr I % M ftztkinz BcJ.*r io Sirsighisn You Oat | ?/Acr iza*.:r.j; Tco friech* Tonss I . Liver,- Kc^lztcz 2cv.?i!s. Acta Fls^scfjtly. Cusrsntscd. - ' > "' _ Jfany peopio cat tco much evrry cay and most cat rr. i>ch too inueh some days. That is why Americans cuffer .more then-any people in the j world from -indigestion, biliousness i end constipation. With a llltie tfccughtfulncss and j cr.ro, however, r, great amount of this distress coiJd bo avoided axd you'll'neve:* reatizo h'cw true this J.7 | until you become ore of the several r.ililloii poo;;!o of this country who keep a be:: of Nature's Remedy (JJR Tabis!.?) constantly or> har.d and ur:e it "whenever indigestion, biliousness or Constipation threatens. UnIii:o laxative purges, cathartics, "cue'a r3 oi!, calcmo*. etc.,'which mcrelv force bowel action, Nature's Kcmec'y a beneficial inEuenco'upon the entire disictive* ana e:ua;na<:vo u.y->tcin?t>o stomach, Jivcr, i;ov.*c!:j c..:d / even the I.iCr.cyo. Its purpose is to presold viccrovz and Iin:::ionioiw action of nil t!:o organs that handle tho food r.r.d bed7 v.aste. Thr-t i *. v;hy t!.^ rnsv.ILs r/htch icllo'.v tho of IVrt-rc'a Remedy are aftrpys r. ^Iclljhtfui rurprho to 'those -ho t.\v it. The arvlcn v.-hile prompt and th'nroush, is an rnild and grenilo ar.d plcacant as .T7c.tv.ro horE-Vi.r. and tho thorough clean.'nr.g' tho body i -ec-ivcs brings a fc^ihis; of real relief and benefit sdeh as no Irnn-tivo pill 01* cathartio ever pro uv. .;i i ji" ii.jjfcuv. i Cot a 23c box of Nature's Remedy CCTt Tablets) cad try if. There is no ri.ik in cioim? so. i'or it must jjive you greater relief and benefit than any liver or bowel medicine you ever used or money back instantly. It is sold, guaranteed and recommended by your drii??isv GILDER & WEEKS CO., Druggist. ??-.i<v VI ? -jri T"Vir,,-i'-~? 1 I I l? I 'THMW | ??????.?( ler and Son \ cci," Writes Mr. Gentry; e, Term. . . ? ? j writes: "Ziron iron ionic nas mase goca ; in my family. J have used it to a very ! great advantage to myseii and my 14- j year-cid boy. It did us both good. 1' think it is a good medicine for what it is ! recommended." i If you are pale, weak, tired, feel down and cut, take Ziron. It wiil'put iron into j your blood, and should help build you up, j Get a bottle from your druggist today, j and give ZIRON a fair trial. Sold bj? him under a money-back guarantee. Ask him about it. Ks^wstTteU you. . ! including S'V'O in cash ami an ua- . h known ntiai _no;' bonds and other j*1 valtiyble papers, some belonpinK 'o j the bank and some from private de- j j j. os: t j " All wires leading to the town wen ! * cut by the robbers so that new? or j robbery rouhl not be sent out to! c officers here and other nearby towns.' ; n The robbers left no clue. j [ ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCK- ! HOLDERS. IK | *> The annua! meeting of the stock-J ^ holders of the Peoples National Bank:x of Prosperity, S. C., will meet in the! a office of the president in the bank.' building on Tuesday, January 11,! y 1921, at 1 o'clock p. m., for the pur-;-' pose of electing directors and attend- g; irg to any 'other business that may I n come before the meeting. W. W. Wheeler, President. c NOTICE To All Per30i:s Who Are in Business ar of Any Kind: ii The license ordinance for the year gr 1921 has been enacted and is now of force. ; a; The schedule cf rates is identical tl with that of the pas-; year. Come si and get your licer.se so that your c i | EsaaaavgB8RmB3&BssaBSEEas& I v- . .. ; I still have ro bales cotton,, ii i . j house at Silve: i ?"? j: Silverstre< ij . ' VT.T,. m o.-v ^'\-r ,<rni?ii<~-v imt -?*<*' .? f.Wkj-"*!**" # I ' . I I . asBs&B&ess j. j " : GTS rf?f V ^ ^ *V 1 j; . A penalty o\ I; will be added:! not paid on or !| ISthofJamia i , . I Please -do nc |; ;! last day-come ji V so as to avoid ! I ( ij eefc more satis | vice. Clerk and I I j I BS3E89S??$S usiness may be carried on without in oyauee. J. W. Chapman, Clerk and Treasurer. -;-4tlta\v. i Reasons Why You Should Join THE STAGS The coming fraternal order dues . nlv SI ?)er month. No "Booze." Each local drove regulates th'e paytents of its benefits in the iorm of onations, as follows: 1st?Local droves of Stags $7 "jekly sick and accident benefits. 2nd?Local droves $125 funeral enerits. 3rd?Local droves furnish free hysician for members and family. 4th--Local droves furntish free legal dvice to members. , . < -J.?. rrcu_ pi ?.:n ;? lilt" CllclgS WJli HVjJ JTJU l?l cur business. 6th?The Stags help yen got a po- ; ition when you are out of employer, t. 7tii?The Stags give you many soial advantages. 3t)i?The Stags supreme drove has n ideal plan to care for orphans. Oth?rhe local drove can have ele Ant club rooms, billiard, pool, bowl- 1 lg and dancing parlors, library and ymnasium. 10th?One night each week is set J side as "Ladies Night." This is for ^ ie entertainment of mothers, wives, 9 isters, daughters and lady friends fl =s__i sammaasEutmsg&msafa om for 400 n my rstreet. I < mm i i > i 11 ?in?www?mmm?? et, 8, C. AM u j <yoiwwi?y iwuwiiwiw r. ,'JI ? ' ? E2S2E3 ' j r 10 percent to all taxes. before the ? \ . rv. >t wait to the before then | a rush and sfactorv ser- J ? a 'reasarer . | / , 3 ?