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Historic Sits of Fort Creve Coeur Marksd Springfield, 111., Jan 2.?Jtfora than 20 years of investigation baa baen ended by the anouncemsnt here that the historic site of Fort Creve Coeur, on a bluff across the Illinois river from Peoria has been definitely decided. Fifteen acres surrounding the site have been given to th state, and an imposing marker has been made ready for the formal ceTemony of designation. Announcement of the decision, by the Illinois State Historical society was made by the State Department of Public Works and Buildings. The full report of the Historical society will be made public later. Contentions have been born, and have lived and died, while this controversy has gradually increased in interest and warmth. All actual remains of the fort, built 241 years ago by the French chevalier, La Salle had been lost, long ago. The historical Society weighed all arguments and decided. But even now that the Illinois State Historical society has spoken, the doubt has not dwned, and many contenders still maintain their land holds the sacred remnants of this earliest Illinois fort. Owners of the land on which the marker will be placed are Mr. and Mrr. C: H. Wagner of Fond Du I>ac township, Tazewell county. THey have deeded the land to the state. Among their most energetic contenders was the City of Peoria, which desired that the marker be put on the Peoria side of the river. Some argument for the Fort Creve Coeur on Peoria's side was adduced, but it was too weak. Maps from official archives of the French government at Paris, put the fort on the Tazewell side. With that decided the controversy was still warm. Land owners up and down the river laid their claim. "The search for the truth as to the exact site," says an announcement by th Department of Public Works and Buildings," was pursued over many ' years. An examinatin of all the Illinois history, both translations and originals of J'rench writers on, the subject and many other books have been made, in order to make the col- ' lection of opinions as complete as possible. The Illinois State Historical society finally selecter as the actual location of the fort a spot situated on a abeautiful bluff overlook- I ing the Illinois river in Fond Du I^ac 1 township, Tazewell county, south and ? ease 01 reoriaa. mis is the site se- i lected some years ago by the Peoria ? chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution." I I Jazz Going Into Discard < Chicago, Jan. 2.?"'The Jazz" is slowly but surely going into the dis- i cord according to u statement issuea , hero by the Fenton Bott, of Dayton, j Ohio, Director of Dance Reform ot , the Amercan National Association, , Masters of Dancing. "The 'Fox Trot' is the dance that receives the most abuse by the dan- , cer," said the statement, "and it is 1 the 'Fox Trot' music as written and < played in 'Jazz' fashion that causes cases the dancer to abuse this popular dance. There is nothing wrong ( with the 'Fox Trot' or the steps in | the 'Fox Trot,' but it is a conceded fact among all teachers of dancing ( that the Oriental suggestiveness and broken time in the Fox Trot Jazz i music, together with the lack of sufli- i eient supervision, is rsponslble for the downward trend of the dance. 1 The American National Association of Masters of Dancing began two , years ago to work for cleaner dancing. Hundreds of Welfare Associa- , tions, thousands of college deans, police women everywhere and finally the public dance hall proprietors are listed in the work with us. We all v feel' and hope that the crest of the wave of this disgusting wriggling 'Jazz' has been reached and reports to us from every part of the country show 'clean dancing' crusades being started everywhere. "All exaggerated movements, especially of the upper parts of the body, are in very bad taste in social dancing, and are nver found with true refinement and culture." Nine don'ts are given in the statement. They are: "Don't permit vulgar jazz music to be played. "Don't permit young men to hold their partners tightly. "Don't permit partners to dance with cheeks close or touching. "Don't permit 'neck holds.' "So-called 'shimmy' or 'toddle' dancing should not be tolerated. "Don't permit dancers to take either exceptionally long or ihort steps. "Don't dance frm the waist up; dance from the waist down. "Don't permit suggestive r.iocemonts. "Don't permit dancers to copy the extremes that are now used on the modem stage. Society to , Exterminate Vermin London, Jan. 2.?A society has just been founded for the scientific extermination of vermin. It was christened the Institute of Applied Postoloflfy. Alfred E. Moore, its chairman, be. lieves it will accomplish a work of international importance. Twonty.-slx women hold positions on educational, public welfare end other important state boards in New Mexico. ,, fe: An Adventure of Lenins Riga, Latvia, Jaft. 21?A story tallling bow Nikolai Lenine, the Russian Bolshevik Premier, hid in a haystack in a swamp near Petrograd in July, 1917, and from that headquarters directed Communist activities in the Russian capital while agents of Premier Kerensky, aided by police dogs, searched for him, has ju3t been officially told. Lenine finally escaped to Finland as a fireman of a locomotive and lived secretly for a time in the house of the chief of police of Helsingfors, a Bolshevik sympathizer. Then he returned to Petrograd to become proletarian dictator of Russia. The story is told in the Moscow Pravadn by A. Schotmann, Finnish Communist, who was delegated by the central committee of the Soviet party to find Lenine a safer biding place than the haystack. Schotmann writes that he visited Lenine in his haystack headquarters each day carrying provisions and newspapers. Lenine, he says, occupied himself in writing documents for world revolutionary propaganda and drawing up resolutions to bo adopted ' by the Communist Party Congress which held frequent meetings m 1 Petrograd. The police chase was becoming hoti 1 and it was decided to move Lenine to * Finland. The future Premier shaved * off his beard and mustache and bought ! a wig to hide his bald head. Sehot- j mann arranged with n friend, an en sineer, to give him passage as fire- ' man on his locomotive. After a long march through the 1 swamps, they reached the railroad ' and Lenine rolled up his sleeves and 1 fed firewood into the firebox while the ' other members of the party tracelled ^ as passengers on the same train. At the last Russian station on the Fin- ' nish border, the quick-witted engineer ' detached the locomotive and took it * behind the station to take in water, while the passengers' passports were * examined. Just before the signal for * the train's departure, the locomotive c returned and in 15 minutes Lenine * was safe on Finnish soil. By the end of September, 1917, he ^ was back in Petrograd personally di- ^ recting the operations of the success- c ful revolution in November of that 0 year. r Government Faces Big Deficit f , e Vienna,. Jan. 2.?Indications are % V that the beginning of the new year will find the government facing a ieficit of 200,000,000,000 crowns. Ii ' nud reached 105,000,000,000 at th.' j, ?nd of October. The largest single item of the delicit is for subsidized foodstuffs bought outside the country, this j i lnnn ummmf iniv t/\ Q'l AAA AAA AAA w c :rowns. The railways have been run j it a loss of 28,000,000,000. Another serious item of loss has q seen on foreign exchange, the rov- e srnment being forced to sol! crowns j For foreign values for payments cf ^ lour, fats and various other com- j modifies undej the food subsidy plan. s During the past few months the j fall of the crown against standard ( values has been unchecked and its c purchasing value has about reached , thte vanishing point t The largest note in circulation in g Austria has been 10,000 crowns, hut c the tremendous volume of circulation t oas made even that denominnti m in- < sufficient and an issue of 100.MO ^ mown notes is in preparation. f Where 1,000 and lesser notes are c handled in quantities they are no j onger counted, but weighed. A table j of weichts has been worked out and , found to bo accurate enough for all c ->r<1inary purposes when jewellers' { scales are used. r In the mind of the average Aus- y trian there sqems to linger some f fatuous belief that some day and some how the crown will recover in j value and he gambles on that hop" j ?ven in such business deals. Mean- t while, the presses are turning ut j nearly 1,000,000,000 a day, the last \ week in October the issue amounted ( to 10,000,000,000, and he sees his j maximum note of circulation advance i from 10,000 to 100,000 crown denom- i ination and even that worth but lit-, < tie more than the tenner was six i months ago. Chilean Fruit , Growers Find Market i Santiago, Chilp, Jan. 2.?Chilean I fruit growefs are beginning to find ' a market for their fruits in the Unit- ( ed States. Shiprtients of Chilean ' peaches, grapes, melons, cho/ries, * plums, strawberries and chirimoyas, a kind of custard apple, have been ' disposed of in New York at good prices, says F. Kojas Huneeus, Direc- i tor of Agriculture. The director has pointed out to Chilean growers that the best market in New York is to be found from s January to April and advises them as to the best method of sending their fruits more than fi,000 miles to the New York market. Handbags Musk Match Gloves Paris, Jan. 2.?Handbags must inawn ine gioves according to the latest idoa in Paris fashions. For 1 several weeks fashionable women 1 have been using the samo material i in their purses as in their drosses, i but now gloves striped with pui-ple, blue, green and white kid hnve ap peered and bags are being made to blend with these colors. It is a wise woman who saves the | water from cooked rice, macaroni or , vegetables a nduses it in soups or * saucea{ < Review of U, S Foreign Trade in i?2i Foreign trade figures of the United States in the calendar year 1921 show a heavy reduction in their stated value of the merchandise entering and leaving the country. In no single year in the history of our foreign trade, says the Trade Record of The National City Bank of New York, have the official figures shown <Jueh a percentage of reduction. The total foreign tn.de of the country, imports and exports combined, stood at 13% bilion dollars in the calendar year 1920. the highest total ever reached, and eleven months figures end.ng with November, 1921, justify the assertion that the total for the full year just ending will no^ exceed $7,000.000,000, ami will probably fall a little below that total as against 13% billion dollars one year earlier. The reduction in the total value.-, of the merchandise entering and leaving the country In 1921 will he about 48 percent; in imports the reduction will be approximately 03 per cent and in nxports 45 per cent. This fall off in the values of the foreign trade in 1921, when compar?Ml with 1920, extends to every groat arroup of articles, both in imports and jxports. Raw manufacturing material imported shows a full off of !ibout 53 per cent in total values; foodstuffs 63 per cent, and manufactures 43 per cent, these figures being! )f course in very round terms, the, imaller reduction in manufactures be-1 ng due to the fact that importers j *re bringing in large quantities of iianufactures in anticipation of a ligher tariff. On the export side, man "acturing material shows a fall of 18 per cent, foodstuffs 33 per cent, and iianufactures 51 per cent, these fig-' ires as to exports being also neces-; ?arily in very round terms. Considering the trade of the counry with the grand divisions, import* ;rom Europe show a fall of 38 per] :ent, from North America 54 per cert, i 'rom South America 64 per cent, end; 'rom Asia and Oceania 58 per c-;nt. j Exports to Europe show a decline of i 15 per cent, to North America, 4') peri ent, to South America 56 per cent, I ind to Asia and Oceania 39 per cent. , The general causes of th's trenondous decline inthe value o* every I ;roup of articles imported or export-] d and also a reduction in the trade nth every grand division of the. corld, lie primarily, says the bank's tatement, in the fact that the prices>er unit of quantity are i i most of he important articles less than half lose of a year ago and thrc in many nstances a given quanti'y of mer-i handise being now imported is valued; it less than half that at the same date ast year. Our biggest imports are if course, in manufacturing materials, ndia rubber, hides and skins, wool,i aw silk, raw cotton, fibers and tin.' [he rubber imported in October, 1921,; intered at 14 per pound against 37c n the same month of last year; catle hides at 10% cents a pound against 12c; carding wool at 14c a pound, igainst 40c a year ago; combing wool n September, 1921, (no imports in )ctober) at 23c per pound against 66c ne year earlier; raw cotton in Sep ember 16 He against 54He in Sepember of the preceding year; tin, !7Vz cents a pound against 52e a year >nrlier; Manila hemp $135 per ton igainst $310 one year earlier; the >nly important manufacturing maerial which has failed to show a big 'all off being raw silk. In foodstuffs londitions are similar, the sugar im>orts of October, 1921, averaging two ind eight tenths cents per pound igainst 13.9c in October of the pre:eding year, while in other articles of 'ood there Is a material reduction but lone as great as that of sugar, which >y the way is the biggest single arti le of foodstuffs imported. The fall off in values of the principal articles exported is equally strikng and an equally important factor in he causes of the decline, wheat exported in November going at $1.18 per pushel as against $2.60 in November pf last year; corn in October at 60c per bushel against $1.33 in the same nonths of the preceding year; cotton it 20c a pound against 30c one year jarlier, and bacon at 13c a pound igainst 23c a year earlier. Of course, adds the bank's statenent, these big reductions in the values per unit of Quantity of the articles mported and exported, are not the pnly causes of the big fall off, for there are many actual reductions in quantities, and this is due to the deceased purchasing power of our own farmers and wage earners and also to ;he big reduction in the imports of he countries to which our exports ire sent. \ssigns Pension to War Widows and Mothers Rome, Jan. 2.?Gabrielle d'Annundo, the poet soldier and hero of Plume, has assigned the pension to which he is entitled as a wearer of he Gold Medal for Valor to the Association of War Widows and Mothers of the fallen. The pension hook which belonged :o the Gold Medal which the King at bached to the coffin of the Italian Unknown Wafrior a few moments before it descended into tl*e tomb on the Monument of Victor Emmanuel, will also be devoted to the same association. Schools to Educate Working Men Liverpool, Jan. 2.?The Unionist party han voted to organize schools af political stud to educate Unionist working men with the special object if fighting Bolshevism. I * S ft I Satu 9 By virtue of an order < H extremely easy terms an* I T a All of the land compr I H.S. B In and around II H This property is adjac 9 to be had around the fas B Gaffney, and located on This sale is being cond I 1 9 and will be sold for posit 19 Your own price, extra S3 Esq., Trustee. I S0UT1 !S. B. KING, Pre. By the way, if you conl our own modern auction anywhere that knows us. Texas Railroad Decision Boosts Bonded Warehouses Recent action of the Texas State Railroad Commission, by which the cotton concentration privlleKe was extended so as specifically to include Federally bonded warehouses, should serve aq a stimulus to warehousemen operating in Texas ta^Lplace their warehouses under tlvflHfcpil warehouse act. Under thiifpre the railroads are required to apply the expense bills covering the local freight from point of origin to the warehouse to the bill of lading when the cotton is shipped from the warehouse, on all .cotton moving between points in Texas and originating within 100 miles of any Federaly-licensed ware house in which the cotton is to be stored, when the bills of lading bear the notation "for warehousing." The operation of the rule is best explained by an example. Cotton originating within 100 miles of Dallas may be shipped to that city for storage. A flat short haul rate is charged from the originating point to Dallas. Later the cotton may be shipped to Galveston for export. When this shipment is made, the incoming expense bill is applied to the outgoing ship ment, the charge being the through rate from original shipping point to Galveston. Thus a credit is allowed1 for the short haul charge from original shipping point to Dallas. The rule is therefore to the shipper's advantage since the through rate from original shipping point to Galveston is lower than a combination of rates from original shipping point to Dali las and thence from Dallas to Galves' ton. Public Health Institute Held in Columbia Columbia, Dec. 31.?The prospectare for a large attendance upon the Public Health Institute to be held in ' Columbia January 9 to 14. This is the first school of its kind held in the United States outside of the city of Washington, and hundreds of physicians and others interested in public health have been going to Washington heretofore for the same class of in' structions that will be given in Columbia, The sessions will be held in the town theater, which is conveniently located, and all the preparations have been completed. There will be a special division of the subjects for the women workers who will attend and it is ex pected that they will constitute a larfce portion of the institute. Dr. J. Adams Hayne Is the director of the division, but the nctual preliminary work has been done by Dr. C. V* Akin, who is very much pleased over the 'prospects. Some of the subjects which will be discussed in all of their phases will be tuberculosis, child hygiene, nutrition, communicable dises, administrative problems, medical social work and related matters. There will be i some Important speakers on the proI gram daily and the institute is sure ! to do a vast amount of food at this time. Columbia is one of the 20 cities in the United States in which these institutes are to be conducted during the year, and this city is the institutional center for North and South Carolina and part of the Georgia. While there are many public health a Meet Us Wi irday, Jai PACOLE >f His Honor, H. E. Depass, Refei i for absolutely HE HIGH iaing about 260 acres, (subdivide , LIPSC01V PACOLE ent to the Pacolet Manufactured t growing town of Pacolet, which the Southern Railway. ucted for the creditors of H. S. LIPSCOM ively the HIGH D< SATURDAY, JAI easy terms, cash prizes, "All 1 iEKN STAT "Land Selling on a Soi ident. template the sale of your land wi methods. Reference any fin ar workers who are interested in one <>. more branches of the great forward movement, yet there are few whi have ever had the opportunity to have! all branches of the work presented in i this manner, and the institution in Co-1 | lumbia offers them an opportunity. i ; i "Experience" On Stage George V. Ho hart's Celebrated I''ay is Picturized by Paramount. There are few better known plays than " Expedience," by George V. Ilobart, which was presented in New; York in 1014. In George Fitzmaura e\-1 Paramount pieturization of this stag 1 success, the story was enlarged ami put into scenario form by Waldenmi I _ Young. It will bo shown at the Rinltnl Theatre today. ! *" As the screen affords greater p is sibilities for detail in stories than tht stage, those* who have seen the pla; will have the added interest- of see in; just how the scenario has been h;?n died. One f.ature which was adder, much to its value, is the charm tor o ''Gloom," which does not appear ii the original play. The part is ilv anlilhisis of "Intoxication." .Mr. Filz inaiiriee anU Mr. Younc decided that "(3 loom" would add a modern touch t< the allegorical play tlint was writ .en Inline the anti-liquor law went .nU ' etfeet. ' Famine Kills Thousands Khlmogori, near Archangel, ltus- I sia, Jan. 2.?Famine and privation > are killing off the <5,000 or 7,000 men and women political prisoners here, < mostly sent from Baku, Tillis and i other points of the Caucasus rcpub lies. Unless released under th. i clauses of the conditional amnesty, < published November 7, it is believed all will perish of hunger during thr winter. Many of the 1F>00 who came here ' last March have been robbed of theit ; clothes and valuables, and their hun > ger is such that they are now in tin i swelling stage of famine that lire cedes death. They are confined in a monastery. I with red pickets posted several mile? i distant so no one can approach the I place. Of a group of 90 sent here | from Baku, many of whom were com i panions of the English prisoners 1 there, all but one have been execut- ! ed. . I This little town, the site of th^ : first English trading settlement ir 1 Russia has long been noted as a pris on. Anna I^eopoldovna, who was re- < gent of Russia in 1746-47, acting fo her infant son, Ivan VI, died a pris < | oner here in 1746. Alcohol Causes Insanity Berlin, Jan. 2.?The number of cases of insanity attributed to the excessive use of alcohol has increased , in Germany to such an oxton! that some writesr view the "ituatinn with alarm and discuss the advisability of , restricting the use of intoxicants. All illnesses due to the use of alcohol have increased 100 percent in the last year over the average for the war years, according to o'lieial i statistics. Some authorities, denying tnnt th^ use of alcohol has greatly increased i attribute the present situation to the weakened stamina of the German > people. V mmhhhhmmi itti a Smile" I i. 7th, 1P.M. | :t, s. c. I 'ee in Bankruptcy, we will sell on the above date on B dollar I &d into lots and small farms) also a store building of S| IB, Bankrupt I :T, S. C. I g Coirpany property, and is without a doubt the best K? i is only a few mile3 from Spartanburg, Union and H B, Bankrupt I ollar I i 7th, 1 P. M. I Star" Brass Band. Sale conducted for Bobo Burnett K ES REALTY CO. I ind Business Basis." B HOME OFFICE: Greenwood, S. C. B rite for one of our late t illustrated booklets explaining B icial institution of our home town, or anybody B /Wm Eggs From Every Hen L There Is no excuse for a loafing It ? You ?.?tt make layers HjT \i^u^TJjn^mr^? and real money-makers out of every solitary hen you own ^alisipp ?ytr Egg Producer The wonderful poultry tonic, develops the egg-producing organs: makes early layers of young pullets; keeps poultry healthy and produces fnst growth In younp chicks. 2 1-2 lb. box, 80 cents. We carry a complete line of Caro-Yet Standard Remedies for Horses, Mules. Cattle, Hops and Poultry. We will pladlv refund your money If you fall to pet satisfactory r> suits front tho use of any Caro-Vet remedy. t yt AUTHORIZED DEALERS IN UNION COUNTY s J. E. Fowler Colon, S. O. II. T. Ilipplns Buffalo, S. O. Storms Drvip Store I'nlon, 8 (' Keller's Drug Store Buffalo, S. C .1. Moliley .Feter I'nlon, S. <\ \' \\ *rovrn Buffalo. S. C. Fast Shlo Druir Co I'nlon S C Mtnter Sedalla, S. C feast Jsllo "rug Co., \."\on- h," , Mutual Supply Co Carlisle. S. C I (.lymphs Pharmacy F nlon. S c ? .rllnlo Cash Co Carlisle. S. C. Fowler's Pharmacy Monarch Murrali's Pharmacv ... .Fonesvlile. S. C. .1, 1!. Bedenhotiglt, Route 4.. .I'nlon, S. < I >ncs\llle Drug Co .... Jonesvllle. S. C. lay Imprisonment ? - Is Great Experience ln Bankruptcy Union States of America, Moscow, .Ian 2.?(Tho Associat ?d Western District of So th Carolina, ' /ds).?The majority of politics! I In the Disfr'. t urt irisoners, men and women, being re- ,, . 1" t'K> nin'te" of eased from Soviet prisons speak Mlb:,iyMa,'Un V-5' l\"" ',H dTP bus . , . , , ' . J mess as Murtn i n iture Comvith satisfaction of their imprison- p-.nv ?upt. nen as "a great experience." While Notice is hen by ir vi n that ou the hey are not at all anxious to renew 7;1'1 ^ the said , . *4,1 * * i'i Mai tin Furniture C... v as duly adhe experience, they insist that it did jwlu.?u,tl a bankrupt! a..d the first hem good. meeting of the creditors will be held As being locked up in Kussiu bis il' ^ nion. S. (., in the office of S. L, r , Barron, hso., Keferce m Bankruptcy, jecome a sort of habit. Ha re is no on lh(. ,,th (Jay of january> 1922, at ihame attaehed to imprisonment, in o'clock in the forenoon, at wmoh ind those released seem proud <>f time tlje said creditors may attend, heir time spent behind bars. P,-oVt'. their claims, appoint a trustee. . , | 'xaininc the said Bankrupt, and transitu* women prisoners feel that thej u.j sUl.|i other business as may proplave sen a novel side of life ai d, nly come before said meeting, vhile rich in abuse of the conditions B. h, Barron, >f their imprisonment, invarial lv s $ pjljiV'TttS'-tit vind up th"?ir recital by saying their. ,vas a great and valuable experierv < . niiAMr 1/v_ Instead of punishing these people. I rlONt ID# t would almost soem the Soviet government had conferred a distin t We sterilize all ararmenta lenefit on them by locking them no vvith hot dry steam. We rho solitude of prison life, with it- <jUarantee not to slick or opportunity for self-aeni:uintan< e , ... ~ . . ...... ., , t i , corcli any thing. Special atippealed to Miss Alexandra Tolstoi, * b * laughter of the great writer, win -ew.ion given to Parcel Post. ,vns locked up once for eight month; I certainly appreciate it as it a stretch. } much or more than anyone A Georgian princess spoke enth-i ! ejse for a triaj frQm you siastically to the correspondent of 1 ... , . .. . . , We call and deliver your iter imprisonment because it confirm- J L'd her belief in God. She related Pressing anywhere. ^ When flow, after months of slow travel in a you have a hurry-up jefc we prison train on her way to Anh-.^re at your service. angel, she fell ill with typhus, aftev ? D " J which she was, .by some mischance. flamCS i TCSSlDg dlld put in solitary confinement. She RonoJi* CL broke down under the strain, she *%?P<llr jDOp< dated, and fervently prayed for re- Nicholson Bank Building. leas, and it came within the day. PHONE 167 Another woman, once wealthy, d - Agent for two dye houses, dared that her imprisonment had |arRest in the South. Phone taught her the Communist regime . _ . .. . ? . .167 and Dust-Proof Motorwas no worse if not an improvement on the old imperial one. Thrown cyc'e wiH call. among people of her own class i i ????????????????? prison, she found thoni selfish and Notice to Debtors unwilling to share their food, cig- And Creditors aiettes and blankets, as was the ease { \j| prisons holding claims or deof the plain soldiers of the peasan' mauds against the estate of E. Foster class also in teh same prison. Kelly, deceased, must present the Th, human m.ak of and politeness dropped from the edu- pk. |? Kelly at Union, S. C? and all cated people, and their fears and sel- persons indebted to said estate must fishness shone plain for all to read," n,nke payment likewise. said this woman. "The n)ill of suffer- Executrix ^Est* E. F. ^efly. Ing and bloodshed and revolution has 12-20-27; i-3 been a needful lesson. It is an 1m- -- - - " =B* pulse towards a new life." CHICHESTER S PILLS ' ' V TUB niAMONU BIAKB A One of the most famous of chil- ci!t VhM*'r Iin J?VrfrT? ? dren's hymn's, "I Think When I Rend jg Thnt Sweet Story of Old," was writ- y* ir"l?" 7."_''lh< r iXten many years ago by a young Eng- ( % ri JKSE5* lish woman, Jemima Thompson. x? r SOLO BY DRUGGISTS EVtRYWMlJQL