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For Infants and Children. NKind You Have .... Always Bought ACOHOL 3 PER CENT. Arearsthe OfI' NOTNAncoTIC. Use Aprkctbmnlyor For Over Thirty Years nVe YORK ~ Uf? m OK 8? Friends of Picken, County ofo F OR twenty-three years we have done business to -geth er, I have tried to give you good service and Full Value for YourMoney. I have enjoyed a good patronage from you and appreciate it, and ask a con tin uance of same. --My stock is full and complete with all seasonable Dry Goods, Underwear, Hosiery and Sho Briankets etc., at as low prices as dependable will tkety-treeetyas wr e wae aganst HuighPeso andtr o give luead togive. otwitstd ring prceand FuhoalesfrYu My have eyedsl at gOld Pice of s. ur Undewea and fulankoet withe ash seaoal ry Goods whnerear Hsirygandnh mare, Ilanets et, at slwpie sdpndableTem go ca K e sold.KW W esNtTakWr Europ wdlake alltswr PES-Cl cwaraanst beigie priceon he word advanewe sillse l insd Pries.. ur nderwark dis et will bere ee Tahefre'gos, so gret trean barain yo shul drin PEPSI-Cola crowns ealthful pev cethR eneftord renjoyen Flvonsid deici ner Effec isk wollesoe satisfemed quic k to ers.I UHE S tirhat t t "There's aeatereas n ce"yo hol 5e Cents UEbnftadejyet lvri 5 Builders' Hardwave of every variety we are now of - fering in the best qualities at the T *' 'lowest prices. .It will pay allT * contractors and builders to call*i and look over our stock with a? - view to purchasing for any new + - Locks, Keys, Bolts, Bars, Nails, - Screws, Staples, Nuts, Rivets,+ /and everything in Hardware like ~. building is here, together with all tools for all kinds of builders. Piokens Hardware & Oioory SV Pickens, South Carolina j A FULL LINE OF F IREW OR KWS4 SAND A NICE LINE OF DOLLS A Special Price on Some Colored Goods! .Yours for trade J. W endricks ft REAT BLOOD PURIFIERG remedy for Rheumatism, Blood Poispn and PPMAN CO., Savannah, Ga. -, -S.. The Trey A Novelized Version of the Moth Produced b.# th By LOUIS . Adihr of"Th F*m Hahr." Euatrated wi Photopa Copyright1914. t - - CHAPTER XXVI. Make-Believe. For upwards of three-quarters of az hour of that golden morning which fol lowed the night of his return to Nev York, Mr. Law was permitted to es teem himself 'he happiest of mortals. And inasmuch as this is not only I longer uninterrupted term of happi ness than is humanly common but 1i more of that emotion than ordinarily leavens the whole of a lifetime, Ala was perhaps to be envied, even thougt disillusionment when it came was sud den, sharp, and to him unspeakably shocking-a swift, unpresaged plunge from sunlit peaks of supreme content to the black depths of a bleak Aver nus of despair. The beginning of the period wu synchron6us with the slam of a taxi cab door that shut away a superfluous world from the company of two who loved. The sound spelled safety as well se success in Alan's understanding. The car slipped smoothly away from the curb, pursued only by a little gust of semi-ironic cheers from the little company of working men who had wit nessed as well as measurably partici pated in the putative elopement from the house of Trine. Vigilant for any indication that their evasion had had a witness in that strange home of deathless hatred, Alan watched it through the little window In the back of the cab until a corner blotted out the vision of it; then with a sigh of relief sank down by the side of the woman to whom his every thought, impulse and emotion were dedicated. "Rose!" he whispered, and tenta tively touched one of the hands that lay clenched in her lap. She responded with never a sign to indicate consciousness either of his touch or his whisper. And reminding himself of the strain imposed upon her by the experience through which they had just passed, Alan excused her unresponsiveness on grounds of reaction, and for the time felt constrained to let his sweetheart rest and regain her normal poise: there was bliss enough for him In the consciousness that he had won her safely away, that nothing now more than a short hour's drive across town and by ferry across the Hudson stood between them and the marriage that should prove the consummation of all their trials . . . Barring accident! Alan had too often suffered the pen alty of disappointment for over-indul gence in this failing of his for depreci ating the unforeseen, not to make the mental reservation, "Barring acci dents!" with a little shiver of dread. Had any of Trine's household been cognizant of his daughter's escape, Alan argued, interference must have been instant. Despite the reassuring aspect, the preoccupation of his companion so wore upon him that he was presently no longer able to refrain from disturb ing her. "Rose!" he begged again, closing a hand tenderly over hers. "Dearest girl, don't worry another instant! Do calm yourself- remember we are safe She Appeared Anxious to Escape Without Being Seen. now; we fooled them handily-thanks to your faith and bravery, sweetheart! and everything Is going to be well with us from now on. Over in Jersey the minister is waiting now to marry us; and down at the White Star dock the boat is waiting that is to carry us off to England the moment we're mar ried. Think of that--and that I love you. Nothing can possibly break the strength of that combination!" For another minute she rested as she had ever since sinking Into her corner of the taxicab-moveless, taut, unresponsive. Then a long sigh shook her to her very heart, and of a sudden the small fist in Alan's grasp relaxed and her face turned to his like a flower to the sun, a face transfigured, Its lips now soft and yielding, its eyes un closed and smiling into his a smile all misty with unshed tears. "'Alan." she breathed gently. "It can't be true! I'm trying 6o hard to al.ie-but all the while I know it can't '-Le:keti wthth He convertiisepicwih h iute eloquence of h' lip - ^ Head upon his shoulder, the girl A college professor says a mar an live on alcc hol and sugar. Why the sugar A Kentucky breakfast, they usto say, wa a quart of whiskey .a, pound ol steak and a dog. he dog was ade a part of th- e aakfast sc e could eat the s -re le Piedmont. 0' Hearts teSan Nom 0S2PH,'A.q 6a fath do rwe rhomla clung passionately to him. "Tell me again that you love me!" she prayed. "Promise mq yo jneer..let anything come betwen.u, Prp se. me,. Alan -promise me you'll bjlind to.mes ways, dear!" "Can yoU doubt I will be kind?" ht, murmured reproachfully. "I am.afraid. ." she wfilspered. "How could I be anything else, lolo ingyou as I d?" "i am afraid . "Why should I be unkind to your "It isn't that. . . . I'mkiu## afraid." "Of what?" "Of lo", you," "But that can nevc bel" "You can't bi 'r. *What If .9yq were to fid yoid ben m aken?" She''caught heg breath and aedi. hastily-"it you did't reall love meI mean. "Oh, thaft' ridiculous" "I can't be sure. Nothing in liss permanent. What isove? Ilusion of the senses! What ls happiness? -A will-o'-the-wlsp! What is lifp? A [make-believe!" "Dearest!" He held her more close ly still. "You are nervous and over wrought. You don't kiow 'hat you're saying. You can'tmean what you're saying."'. . But sfaythatit's so that life is all make-6&iii~e. Then make-believe you love me-" "Oh, but I do, I do!" "And make-believe for a little 79've. caught the jilld''the ws n for a little-untl, you wake up an realize thatIit's all real~and tNo. She closed her eyes inAuzl: "Yes," she breath, ayou ~are Ugt. Let's make-bellev' it's all truei fia little longer . .. and forget . . He could by no means account for. this strange hnmor; but he did his best to coniifrt ier, none the less ten derly because of his myidlaion. And for a 16ng time she let Illion blind her, restig quiet ly in his arms ma ing believe Only on approaching the Twenty third street. ferry~ thef mist needs rouse and sit apart constrainedly for fear some one might glance through the window and surprise their secret. As if one needed the 'evidence of a caress exchanged to know that they were lovere, who had eyes to see, the flushed lovellnesh o~f the girl shrink ing back in her corner or wit to inter pret the'radiant happiness that shone iti Alan's face as he'bent forward and watched waiily from the window. CHAPTER XXVi I. The Ring. Theirs was the last v hicle to swing between the gates biefore these last were closed. And this was quite as well; for Alan, rising for one last backward glance throuigh the rear window, started in voluntarily and choked upon an ex-1 clamation when he descried a, power ful touring car tearing madly 'toward the ferry-house, It. one passenger half1 rising from the front seat, beside the driver, and exhibiting a countenance] puryile with congested chagrin as he saw his car barred out of the carriage entrance. Quickly sensitive to his emotion, the girl caught nervously at Alan's hand. "What is it; dear?" "Marrophat," he snapped. She uttere'd a hushed:icfy of dismay. "Don't be alarmed, however," ~~he hastened to comfort her. "He'~s lost the race: the gates are shut-even the passenger gate*--and. there must be a company spotter somewhere near by, for the gateman Is virtuously refusing to be bribed~ by a roll of. money as thick as my wrist!" *At that instant the taxicab rolled aboard the ferry-boat; th4 deck gates were closed; a hoarse whistle rent the roaring silen'ce of the city; winches rattled and Shains clanked; and the boat wore ponderously out of its slip. "So much for Mr. Marrophat!" Alan crowed, sitting down. "Foiled again! He can't stop usi now!" "Perhaps . .-" "Why that. perhaps? Why that tone?" he demanded sharply, struck by the forebbding her accents con fessed. "This Isn't the only ferry. There's the Pennsylvadia and .the Lackawanna -and by haril driving he might even manage to catch the boat that con nects with this from the Christopher street ferry of-the Erie!" "Impossible! I don't believe it! I won't!" "Let's not," she agreed. "But, Alan "Yes?" "Promise me-If he should manage to catch up with us-you won't let him talk to you. I mean, don't let him-" "No fear of that!" he asservated hotly. "If he tries to exchange one word with me-I only wish he would!" She seemed satisfied with that; but the incident had served appreciably to chill their spirits. They accomplished the remainder of that voyage in a silence that was no less depressed be cause they sat hand in hand through out. Nor was their taxicab three minutes out of the ferry house on the Jersey shore-though the chauffeur, stimu later by Alana extravagant promises, was doing, his' best to fractur6 the speed lawa, and escape arrest-when( the girl's fears were amply justified; a shout from behind drew Alan's head out of the wvindow on one side and the girl's on the other and proved to both that Marrophat had Indeed found some1 way to .make the crossing without1 geat del4y, His tourjng car was within fifty, yards when they first were away of it; and-Marropbhat, standing on .the running-boar& wras~ shouting inarticu-. lately and Ecourishing an imperative hand; wile the distance between CASTOR IA br Infants s2M Cbf0l. 1 The KindYs HvAwasBugh Bears the clntr~ Signature of JKENS, SOUTH CAROLINA HODGE'S 5c. Notions, Und We Lead Th( and I NOTHIN Easley, thew was momentarily growing lest noticeable. As Marrophat's car drew abreasi Alan nodded and said quietly: "Don'1 be alarmed; I can attend to this gen tleman single-handed." And this he proceeded to demon trate with admirable ease, ever though called upon to do so far soon er than he had thought to be-thanks to Marrophat's hair-brained precipi. tancy. For, failing to influence the taxi driver by shouted . demands oi threats, or to gain the least attentioE rom Alan, Trine's first lieutenant ab ruptly and surprisingly took his life in his hands and in one wild bound bridged the distance between the twc aying cars and landed on the taxi's running-board. Stop!" he screamed madly. "Stop, I say! You don't know what you're loing! Let me tell you-" He got that far but no farther. Im the same breath Alan had flung wide the door and was at the fellow's throat There was a struggle of negligibli duration; Marrophat was in no way his antagonist's match; within three seconds he threw out both hands, lutched hopelessly at the framework Af the cab, and fell heavily to the street. The taxi sped on without pause, its river deaf to the hails of innocent il tndignant bystanders. Alan pulled imself together and looked back just In time to catch a glimpse of a num. ber of loafers lifting Marrophat to his Eeet and helping him to the sidewallt A an unsavory-looking tenement, be lre the cab took a corner on two rheels . "Not seriously injured, I fancy," he :old the girl in response to her eager ook. "Worse luck!" he added gloomily. But it seeemed that he was to have greater cause than this to complain of hs luck, before that ride was ended, hree blocks further on a tire blevw aut with a report like a cannon-crack er, and the taxi lurched perilously, esitated, slowed down, and limped lejectedly to the curb. Alan and the chauffeur piled out is the same instant, the one standing guard-with an eye out as well fox another cab-while the other assessed lamages. "Nothing for it but a new tire, sir,' this last reported sympathetically. "It must have been a broken bottle ox something like that-it sure did rit the usefulness clean out of that shoe.' "Go to it," Alan advised him terse Ly; "and if you make a quick job of it ['U1 stand the cost of the new tire." "But if another cab comes aloni rhile you're at it you'll lose us at uick as a wink. Here's my card, ii ease we have to desert you in a hurry; you vnderstand this is a matter of lifE ad death, and I'll nave no time tc settle up with you. But you can cal at Mr. Digby's office and he'll fb, things up to your satisfaction." The man 'ook the card and after glance at the name touched his hal with more noticeable respect. "Al! right, Mr. Law," he agreed; anything you say." And forthwiti got to work. The rapidity with which he corn pleted the change of tires proved hin an excellent chauffeur, an adept at hii craft; but the delay was one disas trous for ali that. It worked togethe: with what Alan pardonably descibe4 as the devil's own luck to bring thE touring car in sight at the precise mc ment when the chauffeur was crankini up and Alan on the point of re-enter Ing the cab. And though they were off again before Alan could close thi foor, the attempt was hopeless fron the start. And yet-whether or not becausE Alan's distaste for interference has been too convincingly demonstrated the touring car for the time beini contented itself with trailing aboul fty feet in the rear, while the tax ned the tenement purlieus of-the Ho boken waterfront and found its wa3 Into the broader streets of an unpre tentious suburban quarter. Not until they were well into thE suburbs, with few dwellings near and o pedestrians to interfere, did Marro phat's purpose become apparent. Then however-and it happened while Alar was looking back-the touring cal drew in swiftly and easily and Marro phat, rising In his scet, reveled a re volver over the windshield and fired. The crack of his weapon was prac tically coincident with a metallic thuw beneath the rear seat of the taxicab. Not for some moments did Alan ap preiate the viciousness of the scheme Surmising that the gasoline tank has been punctured by the bullet, he wa CLERK'S SATE. state of South Carolina, ounty of Pickens. IN COURT OF COMMON PLEAS. J. P. Freeman et al, plaintiffs, vs. Myra Turner et al, defendants. In pursuance of a decretal order lh he above stated case by Hon. T. J dauldin, dated the 5th day of Decemn >er, 1914, and on file in the Clerk's of ice, I will sell to the highest bidder ox aleday in January, 1915, during th< egal hours for sale, at Pickens C. H. i. C., the following tract of iand,towit All that piece. parcel or tract of lan< n the county of Pickens and state afore taid, containing forty-three acres, mor< >r less, and having te following mete: d bounds, towit: Beginning on a pos >ak; thence N 74 W 35.00 to a rock hence S 3 1-4 E 6.44 to a pme; thencE i20 E 12.00 to a chestnut; thence N 74 E 00 to black oak on the road; thence E 0 E 11.00 red 0; thence S 56 3-4 E 4.5( o blak o; thence N 35 E 19.00 to thE >eginning corner, it being the homi >lace ofThomas Looper, deceased. Terms, cash Purcbasers to pay foi >apers and for recording the same ['erms of sale must be com lied with ii me hour after sale or the and will b4 esl.A. 3. BOGGS, Clerk of Court. 10c., 25c. STORE erwear, Crockery, Supplies, Glasswar kr ,m All on Goods to )ollars. Buy Here OVER DOLL S. C. inclined to believe that Marrophat hoped to stop the taxicab by depriv ing it, in course of time, of its fuel. And with this in mind he was present ly surprised, as the cab took a corner, to see Marrophat's car stop at that corner and Marrophat himself get ddwn. The brow of a hill intervened. shutting off sight of the blackguard as he knelt and lit a match. It was the girl who gave the alarm, suddenlY, withdrawing her head from the win dow to scream at Alan: "He's fired the gasoline! It's lam tg along the street, following the lne. of the leak-and catching up with us!t". Without pausing to put his hand to the latch, Alan kicked the door open. "Jump!" he cried. "For your lif jump! As soon as that lame catches. up with the tank-" Simultaneously the chauffeur, over hearing, shut off the power. The three gained the sidewalk bare ly in time: the tiny trail of flames, al most imperceptible in the sunlight, was not a yard from the jet that spurt-. ed through the bullet hole in the tank. In the flutter of an eyelash the explo sion followed. Had the cab been load ed with nitroglycerin its destruction could have been no more absolute. There was a roar . . . and then a heap of smoking ruins. Without waiting to admire the spec tacle, Alan caught the arm of the girl and hurried her up the street, at the same time calling to the chauffeur to follow. And chance brought them to the next corner as another cab, fare less, hove into view. Promising its driver anything he might ask, in or out of reason, Alan gave him the ad dress, and helped the girl in. If Marrophat pursued Alan could see no sign of him. The second car made better time than the first. Unhindered, and as far as could be determined, without being followed, it Covered the brief remaining distance in a grate fully short lapse of time. The suburb dropped behind a maze of streets where dwellings stood shoul der to shoulder and dooryards were scant. The car swept up to a corner house of modest and homely aspect Two minutes more, and Alan was ex changing salutations with and making. his bride-to-be known to Digby's good friend, the Reverend Mr. Wright. Embarrassment worked confusion with the young man's perceptive facul ties. As this moment approached when two should be made one who had. gone through fire and flood, literally as well as figuratively, for each oth-. er's sake, incredulity drew a veil be-. fore his vision. He viewed the wo-id as in a glass, darkly. He was aware of a decently fur nished minister's study; of two wit nesses in the guise of unassuming womenfolk of the minister's house hold; of the Rev. Mr. Wright himself as a benevolent voice rolling sono rously forth from a black-clad pres ence; of the woman of his heart stand ing opposite him; of questions asked. and responses made; of a ring that was magically conjured from some store apparently maintained against precisely similar emergencies; of a hand that took the hand that was to be his wife's and placed it in his; of hi~ clumsy and witless bungling with the takof fitting that ring to the finger of his sweetheart's hand . And then he was aware of a door that banged violently in the hallway; of the sound of a man's voice making some indistinguishable demand; that Rose's hand was suddenly whipped away, before he could fit on the ring; that the study door was flung open and that this animal of a Marrophat had precipitated himself into the room. He opened his mouth to protest and Marrophat silenced him with a cry. "You fool! Drop that ring! Stop this farce! Don't you know whom you're marrying? That woman Is 3u dith Trinle, you Idiot-not Rose!" IBlankly Alan turned to the girl. Her flaming face, her sullen eyes, her very pose, from which the man ner of Rose had dropped like a cast. garment, confessed the truth of Mar rophat's assertion. And as If this were not enough,.Judith confessed It doubly with a sudden outbreak of such rage as never could have been brewed In Rose's gentle nature. "You devil!" she cried-and threw herself in front of Marrophat with a spring as lithe as that of a leopardess. "Take warning now from me: keep out of my way forever after thie--or take the consequences! God knows," she panted, "why I don't kill ~you as you stand!" He was In her way, between her and the open door. She gave him no chance to move aside, but seized him so fiercely by the wrists that he in stinctively lifted to protect himself, and she fairly threw him half a dozen feet from her. He brought up with a crash against the wall even as the door slammed behind the girl. When Alan, the first to recover, gained the sidewalk, she was already in the taxicab. Whatever reward che had promised the man, he whipped his machine away as if from the fear of sudden death. And darting from the house hard on the minister's heels, Marrophat leaped into his own car and, as if he had not heard her threat or received substantial proof of her earnestness, tore off in pursuit. (Continued Next week) Ledford-Moser Married, last week at Central, Mr. J. R. Koser to Miss Ledford,' W. P. Di -an, N. P., officiat-' ig. Thyas oung couple will irgnbl'rmr - me in Atlanta. S-DOLLAI Enamelware, E e, Dolls, Toys, Eti Sell for Nickels,] and Save the Dif R SoldAn tH wwel W. C. T. U From week to week this column will. be de aure of the Woman's Christian 'Tee nted. All articles intended for putb le department. EDIRED BY MRS The C The cigarette habit is becom ing fearfully alarming. Almost every boy you, meet is addicted to it. The little fellow just out of his swaddling clothes, the boy with knee pants, and the older ones, too, may be seen. in. this town, and every other town al most any day with a cigarette in his mouth. This is the mean est, most debasing, ruinous habit that our boys can have. It is worse than the ligqorhabit, if It is possible for such a thing to be, because it is largely con fined to the boys. Very few of the smaller boys use liquor in any form, and fe to excess, but when it comeo cigarettes the great majority of them use them. How do the bo s get cigarettes? Every grown per son. and especially the business men know it is a violation of the law of this state to let boys have them. The state law on this subject is as follows: "I% shall not be lawful for any nerson or persons, either by him self or themselves, tosell,furnish, give, or provide any minor or minors under the age of eighteen years, with cigarettes, tobacco, or cigarette paper, or any sub stitute therefor. Any person or persons violating the provisions of this section, either in peison, by agent, or in any other way, shall be held and deemed guilty *of a misdemeanor, ~and, upon conviction shall be punished by a fine not exceeding $100 nor; less than $25,. or by imprison ment for a. term of not. more than one year nor less than two inonthsq, or both, in the discre tion of the court; one half. of he fine imposed to be paid to the informer of the offense, and the other half to be paid to the :teasurer of the county." There surely must be some body in this county who is every day violating this law; if not, howr could all these boys who smoke cigarettes get them? PiCKEN PICKEbi Capital& Sua Inet Pal J. McD. BRUCE, President wAR-TIME The Progressive Farmer,i sidered by many as the best f? The Pickens Sentinel, D paper of Pickens county, $1.0( To readers of The Sentine papers one year for.$1.50. DIVERSIFIC INDEPENDE That will be The Progressiv< next year--the slogan and battle trial South and its people who a the chief feature of. the paper w running throughout the whole tv all-under the heading: "DIVERSIFICATION~ IN: Live at Home, Out of De Money Crops (A series of 52 articles, one tended to help small farmers anm .crop folly and Into Independence.] You cannot afford to miss th be so helpful to you. Nor can you afford to do alive-brim full of interesting Everything that happens in the 4 that is worth printing you will f ty paper. A. a citizen it is youl of your County and State. You want both these splend 104 Big Papers. Here Is a bai and get started. I Publshers--Pickens Sentinel, Pickens, S. C. I appreciate your Bargain ( $1.50 for a full year's suberlptioi The Progressive Farmer. Stert Name P. 0. ................~ .. *.. R LIMI [osiery, Sc Dimes, Quarte fereaceX #Aores ?I voted to the cause of Temperance, under the ance Union. Contributions So this cause on ~sho~rId be addressed to the editor of this C. E. ROMNSON, If a person, any person, sells, or furnishes, or gives, or proyides in any..Way any minor under 18 yeari of. age iciarettes, ci garette paper or tobacco, this law is violated,-and the one so doing maks.ahimself liable to a fine and imprisonment If this law was observed by our business men andthegrown up men, the nth.bysonidhot get the cigarettes nor tfi'scco with which to riake them. Thefatheisandinothers should be so vitalf interested in ther boys that -they would see that this law is observed. Itis for the future good and best interesasof their boystbat they'don6'tsmoke' cigarettes did the effece way to stop it is to enforce this law. The, cigarette habit is vile pernicious and most ini'urous to health of mind and ~. I degenerates'ie-=moral- nature, saps the eirgies, inxde n physical strength, and ipairs (sometimes distrovs) reason. It is said that 90. percent. of the boys who apply for cadet ship at West Point are turned d ow n because. of "cigarette heart." The boy who takes to smoking soorj beginsito blunder, idle and waste-his time. Next he will drift ito places of ques tionable pastimes anidafnally be 7 a wreck. Theres are a number of the leading.,bnsiam conicerna in the United States whichtab solutely refpse to einploy any i~ bny who smokes. yearly all of the insuranae companies reftise to issue pollies to cigarettesmo kers because of the efdct upon the heart. The doors of tli best business opportunities are sut" hard and fast against the clgr ette user. - - These thins should put our r boys to thinamng and thegparents to acting. This is the best time in the~ world 'for the' best boys, but the bo:yho drugs himself with tobacco is not to be trustea and, therefore, there is no good placefor hli rs B &A NK S, S. C. FiNANK McFALL Cashier BARGAIN >ublished evenr week, ahd.con i-m journal, $100 a year. Lblished evef week, official a year. lwe are offering both of t ATION Ai NCE IN 1915 1 t Farmers's slogan and battle cry cry, in fact, of 'the whole Indl5 re "baffled to Aght bte"4 i be a notable series of atce relve months-ity-two issues AND INfDUPENDZNNIE 1915." bt, With Surplus Crops -HoW to DOIt.I for each week in they ilarge farmers out of thy l great seuies of articles t without your County reading for the w :ounty as well s int nd, every week in your Sduty to keep posted on ld papers for a full gain for you. Fillot OR $1,.50 mb Offeran both piapers 't