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r aIi DISCOVERY OF UlAodtfiieaiNffii " I caa pdslth'ely assert that Ayer’s Sarsaparilla i.s the best remedy to bo had (or blood disor ders. I have put it ftcuroij others tied will cure you. 8 Sarsa- forms Sarsapanlla “About the year lvS47 I was covered from head to foot with white scabs. The doctors who ttended mo pro- to the severest test, a(tcr other propric- uouuceil it scrofula, but were unable to tary medicines aud physiclaus hud failed, and it did its worl: well. My daughter had suffered, sineo infancy, from scrofulous sores and eruptions. Ayer’s Sarsaparilla effected a complete I ~ cure. Wo cannot | S"Or til© QlSTOOl adequately express our gratitude for what this wonderful mcdicino has dona, fur our child.”—Geo. M. Pendleton, El Dorado, Ar!;. ” When I came out of the army, I was troubled with scrofula. Two Ixittics of Ayer’s Sarsaparilla cured me; so tltgit I have bad no return of the disease. do anythin;; to help me. I grew worse. Tiio skin cracked at the joints, so that I could hardly walk. At last someone recommended me to take Ayer’s Sarsa parilla. I did so, and at the end of three months I was as clean as any man. I shall always feel grateful to the discoverer of Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. E. S. Davis, Laurel, Del. “My daughter has been afilicted for several years with scrofula. Having been recommended Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, wo tried it, and the result is a complete Li T. J. Hopkins, Nortonville, Kans. I cure.” —V. Mattingly, St. Mary’s, Ky. AVERTS Sarsaparilla Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Sold by all Druggists. Has cured others, will .cure you STATION A It Y, ———————XM Kli.- J gutiuwnnwiiil BOOKS, TOYS. BANANAS, APPLES, ORANGES. CANDIES. CANDIES. BOOK AND TOY COMPANY. E. C. ROTHOLZ. later Wtafe ia fail Ha - Persian Mullriu very neat design. ' Blfck Sheer Stripe and Plaid Lawns. Elysee (tripes, black ground and handsome figures. Linen chambrays. Immense line of Parasols with pretty handles. Ladies’ summer undervests. 10 cents end upward. Silks mitts in all lengths. CORSETS! We have sis grades of the n. & 8, corsets; best value for the monyi The largest assortment of cream and black .aces in all widths. Wc have open up some very desirable Point De Jenes, Point De Gui pure aud Point De Irlando in white and ecru. Our ftU L L S ft! E R Y Is still conducted by Mias Maggie Jomes, who has proven to the ladies that jy she can and tries to please. -^Rl Ycur call is requested. E. C ROTHOLZ, MAIL ORDERS promptly attended to. HENS! H. SMITH, Real Estate Agent, FLORENCE St DmiSGlUV, s. c, Special attention paid to the buy ing aud selling of real estate, coiiec tion of rents, &c. The strictest attention will be paid to all business entrusted me. Bestaurant. for Infants and ChllcSren. ^ ‘'Ca»,torl»ir jo well adapted to chfldrfin that | Caatorln cures Colic, Cointlpatlon, f rocomnicrul Itaacuporlorto any prescription i IXHvo^'gW^^p'Sd promotes dl- mown to mo.” H. A. Aacnr.it, M. D., ■ gesticn, ” U So. Oxford 6t., Brooklyn, N. T. | Without injurious medication. -> Tbs Csmtaue Cospawt, 77 Murray Street. N. X. ; ' .. I LiJeJi a—n————■■—■BR—sssns 6IBS0S m woods : " L 1 :i Ii v ^ li i i Take pleasure in arinounciug that they are now prepared to issue wM -- I WHY THE SEA IS SALT tr RECEIVES MINERAL-'SALT FROM LAND AND LOSES NONE. ? Fire and Life Insurance •"•T ./ }. " i- ■' e Policies, and can place all business entrust ed to them in some of the best companies in the United States. In FIRE INSURANtCE they have such companies as XIIE HOME of New York, and the HARTFORD,, ox Hartford, Conn., two of the largest - and best managed companies in the country^ Ini LIFE INSURING . they invite examination into the plans ot the A. Y. MUTUAL, offering, as.they do, very favorable terms to to those who wish to insure. They also conduct a general Brokerage and commission business, May 18 ly THE DARLINGTON Invites an inspection ot their large and well selected stock for the fall and winter trade which is complete in every particular. SHOES I take pleasure in announcing to my friends and the pub lic that I have open ed a Restaurant over the store of Mr. J. M. James, and am pre pared to furnish them with everything in the PETER BOWLES DOES FIRST CLASS Sim Paioi;-: Paper Hanging. -Ralsomine Work a Specialty. ae solicits the patronage of AVllllC making Mil Ml Artistic in Style, ■ Reliableiin Quality, ReasonalileJYM -1 • :o—:0:—oi U D I E S' SB0ES.-' • < - • - Oar stock In Ibis line cannot be snrpassea. We have them in both Button and Lace, all widths, at from 75 cents to tlic cele brated hand sewed goods of E. 0. Burts & Go’s M’fg. lTS*.c Proec&wtf ICvapoi-utioA Ilelci^es Witcr frotu tho Ochcaii:’., but tbo Salt Kcmalns. Tlscrcforo tho Sea la Contlaually Grow ing More Salty. Why is sun water call? ia a question that 4m3 [been ‘rusard*} r.a a ^-sttry and hits given iisti to soniu curious «;,cx;u- lationa, but a littlo consideration on the subject must, I think, satisfy ns all that it would bo very wonderful, quite in comprehensible, if .the waters of tho ocean were otherwise’tiiaU salt as they, ate. • -iThe following explantrtibn wax first suggested to myself many years ago when receiving my first lessons in prac tical chemical analysis. Tho problem then to be solved was tho separation of the.jj.'isea dissolved in water by preeip- itatlngt%em ono ' .by one in a solid con- cMtiouiflltditiiig jaway the water from the firSt,*then frcin tins filtrate preci[>- itating the second, and so on until all were separated or accounted for. But in doing this there was one base that was always left to the last on ac count of tho difficulty of combining it with-any acid j.thai.-would furjtt.a solid cotuponnd—a dffflcsilty so gfcoaivthat its presence was d^ternuned by a different tpethold. Tfebrosmis soda, tho predomi nating base of sea salt, where it is com bined with hydrochloric acid. Not only is soda tho most soluble of all tho mineral btutt£ Imt the mineral acid with which it U combined form's a roinarkably solu ble series of salts—the chlorides. Thus the primary fact concerning the salinity of sea water is that it has selected from among the stable; chemical elbinents-the two which form-tlur labst soluble com pounds. Among thb earthy hasps ia pap which is exceptiejaaliy solnUe—-that ii, magnesia—and this stands ' next to soda in its abnndar.ee in sea water. Modern research has shown that tho ocean contaHis- in -solution nearly every element that crisis npon the earth, and that these elements e-fist in .th&’W'ater in proportions nearly Corresponding to the mean solubility of their various com pounds. Thus gold and silver and most oft he. Other-heavy metals exist there. Soncenstadt found about fourteen grah)s"of goldto tho ton of seawater, or a dollar’s worth in less than two tons. As the ocean covers all tho lower valley „ of tho earth, It receives all the drainage from tho whole of the exposed land, This drainage Is the rainwater that lias fallen upon this exposed surface, has (lowed down its superficial slopes or has sunk into porous land and descended underground. In either case the water must dissolve and carry with it any sol uble matter that it meets, the quantity of solid matter which is thus appropri ated being proportionate to its solubility and the extent of its exposure to the solvent. Rain when it falls upon the earth is distilled water, nearly pure (its small impurities being what it obtains from the air), but river water when it roaches the ocean • contains measurable quantities of dissolved mineral apd veg etable matter, These small contribu tions are ever pouring iu and ever seen- mulntiug, This continual addition of dissolved mineral salts without any cor resjionding abstraction by • evaporation lulp been going oh over since the aurface irf the earth cotisisteil of land mid water. An examination of the composl io.i of ..other ..brtijes. of water which, like the ocean, receive rfVCtfl ’fffld rivulets and have no other outlet than that afforded by evaporation, confirms this view. All of tbtisu are more or !£ss salino, many of them more so than the ocean itself. On tho great tableland of Asia', "the roof of the world,” there is a muliitnde ofsmr.il lake* which receive the waters of rivers and rivulets of that region and have no outlet tpj fher octnti, 'On-ntuap they ap pear like bags, with a string attached, the bag being the lake and the string the river. All these lakes are eaUne, many of-tbem esceasively so, simply because they are ever receiving river water of slight salinity and ever giving off vapor which bas no salinity at all. There is no wash through these lakes, as in the great American lakes or those of Constance. ■Geneva, etc. The sea of Aral and the Caspian are lakes without any other outlet than evaporation, and they arc ralluc accord ingly. Tho Dead sea, which receives the CHILDREN'S SHOES. -e to make this line attractive an them from 35 cents upward. MEN’S SHOES. \Ve have taken special care to make this line attractive and complete and can offer them from 35 cents upward. To call special attention others ion to any one shoo in Uns line would he an injustice to the s, nearly all of which are worthy of mention. ’ 1 " Rubber goods for Ladies, Misses, Boys and • Men/ ailpriees. Also a complete line Umbrellas, Trunks, Valises Satchels, Shoe findings, Polish, Blacking and Brushes, • Cork' soles, Ladies Woolen soles, Ac. Newest Styles in Hats, WOODS & MILLING, Proprietors DAriington She* Store.. LOQUACIOUS SQUATTERS. jQuccr Folks One Meets \Ylille Traveling; ' Over stretches bf Prairle. • ■ • Journeying across the prairie in yhichr ever way the road runs, we at length overtake the strangest looking cavalcade imaginable—a dilapidated wagon with a dirty, ragged cover, drawn by an ill as sorted team of a very small horse and an oversized mule long since fit subjects for the txmeyard. The driver is a dirt be grimed, tobacco stained, low visaged man, while his wife and family, which iastj is much too numerous for even a wealthy . man, are if anything more dirty, more ragged and more disheveled than himself. On a tall, gaunt mule ridts the eldest son and heir (?), driving before him a herd of two cows, a calf, one sheep, a goat and an old, blind, lame horse, while two mangy, mongrel, curs trot in the rear as if only too fully aware of their miserable existence. Occasion ally tho jaded team essays to move out of a walk, but as quickly relapses into the pace which for many weary months has hoenits accustomed gait. As wo rode up the following dialogue snsned: "Howdy.” "Howdy.” "Traveling?” "Travelin rito smart.” "Come far?” ’Como from the bottom lands of old llissoury.” At which point there is a lull in the Aonvefsation’, during which each surveys the other. Suddenly tho knight of the tobacco quid turns interrogater: “Say, stranger, what might ydr dame be?” At this an insane desire takes posses siou of ris to reply like the schoolboy "It might be Jones, but it ain’t,” but we tell him our name, after which the way is open for an endless string of inquiries, the first of which are invariably: "What might your business be?” ’ "Where be you goin?" "Where’d you come from?” "How's crops there?" This sort of thing is bad enough to go through once, but when one passes a dozen such each day in the'week, with each of whom he is 1 expected to go through the same performance, it be comes a terror by day and a nightmare in our dreams. Moreover, one is ex pected Wktop and go through it, and 1 have more than once heard myself char acterized as "too high toned to talk to common folks,” and merely because 1 had no time to stop and talk with them. The absurdity of this is at once apparent t(- those here iu the east, where .to mind cue’s own business is the universal cus tom. As a matter of fact, a live, ener getic man has no time to talk or fool with people by the way. It matters not a picayune whom he meets, what their business is. where they are going or any thing else concerning them. At night we camp at the only water hole we have seen during the day and are soon joined by three bands of mov ers. Presently as many fires are burning, and iis the darkness gathers the scene is by no tnnins unpicturesqne. Children are.playing about, women are cooking, the men are tending the horses and stak ing them out for the night, while the flickering of the -campfires, the harsh ; talk and coarse laughter of tho men lend a certain something hard to describe. If everything we possess is not borrowed by our neighbors we are lucky, even to provisions, which last of course are lorrowed With the mental understand ing on both sides that they are not to be returned. Supper over, the siege begins. Visitors pour in from all sides, mostly from the male element, and for hours we are entertained with a complete his tory of each. We cannot ask them lo go. for are they not "gentlemen” and us good as we? So there we, sit, until finally one by one they drop off and leave us to ourselves. This la a fair sample of . a ride over Texas roads, and the same may be re peated every day hi tho year. In fact it Was during my stay until I hated the sight of a wagon on the same road.— Washington Post. A Cozy Kook. Apropos of upright pianos a scheme for utilising their backs in the forma tion of a cozy comer was recently seen. Tile piano was placed between the mantel and die window, the back toward the fireplace and quite out in the room. The straight back was covered with old gold silk, laid on In straight, lengthwise ■Ionian at ono end and a multitude of I folds. A bench or settle, with end arms, but no back, was drawn across it and provided witli a flat seat cushion of old gold corduroy and two pillows covered with tho same material. Between piano and fireplace, in a position to throw its rays on the music rack, stood a piano lamp with a shade of old gold chiffon, aud at tho other end a palm was grow ing in a jar of dull Japanese effect. When this cozy nook, which was still further protected at the opposite side by a “crane pole” portiere swinging out at an oblique angle with a door space, was • lately intruded upon there lounged in it a husband with a pipe, and at the piano his wife struck Scattering chords and gossiped with him between whiles.— Her Point of View in New York Times. 'minor rivers and rivulets at the other end and sides, is a noted example of ex treme salinity. It is, as everybody Knows, a sea or lako of brine. Tho to tal area of land training into the great ocean docs not exceed one-fourth of its own area, while the Dead sea receives the drainage and soluble matter of an area above twenty times greater than its own. and thus it fulfills the demand of the above stated theory by having far greater sSufiity than has tho great otfeaa. According to this view the salinity of the ocean ^pust be steadily though very slowly increasing, and there must be slowly proceeding a corresponding adap tation of evolution among the inhab';- ants, both auimal aud vegetable. The study of this subject and the effect which the increasing salinity of tho past must have had upon the progressive modifications of organic life displayed bv fossils is, I think, worthy of more at tention than tt has hitherto received from y- 't-mtologist*,—W. Mattieu Wil liams .'i fc-ciu. -e * Darlington. E. W. SUTTOfl Is prepared to make Photographs Of yourbabln Don’t delay; you may Hvs to regret H ■Jtotfio in Hnwltt Block, JrMWW Y; Oysters A Specialty Other delicacies will not be neg lected. Martin Hanley. The People’s Bank ot Darlington. SAVINGS DEPARiAIENT. DEPOSITS SOLICITED FROM ONE DOLLAR AND UPWARK, And 5 per cent. Interest paid thereon. ^ gmall Saving 8 M a ^ e L ai *S ,e ' prolits. E. KEITH MEGAN, W. A. fARRIGAN’, U, L, t’HARLES, ■ ; - A Vollfifui Utkina, hotf. Fiddly Is the chief virtue of tho Ei 1 klmo dog. One of my leaders when crippled by starvation and overwork hod | to be abandoned beeanso hoieiu-.’d to be carried on the sled. I left him ' : --- ilironec hind feeling as if 1 were tearing myself away from a dear friend, but before we continued our way i gave him tho last fish wo had. depriving ourselves of that much fool. Three cays aftcvv.'m.l, ^ while we wow eucaaipi m at tnc i..ruo : village of Kabouak. I ho *1 :: toi-vh'd - i, j Jiaving follou i our trail viiii bi-.>edi"g j • feet f.«d emaciated ' v dy for right) live raises', tV'W-y*fivu..' , 'f u’-.i/li consist * 1 of j crossing tho Mirfcer of IV groa- L'nko . Uinmna in a "poorga" (a r.rthoi samp j ttted species of bUaz.a'd)—A. B. N’tou:* I in Milwaukee Hehtitn-' President. Vice-President Cashier, Fine Job Printing done at this office. Ho llallt One of the 1’jramlilii. The British museum, the great Euro pean storehouse of things out of the or dinary, has hundreds of Egyptian mum mies of alT dynaslles carernlly stowed away within its walls. Some of these are comparatively recent efforts at em balming, and others date back to the "wide revolving shades of centuries past.’' The oldest of the entire collec tion Is the mummy of Mykerinos. He was a king In Egypt in what is known to history ;w the ’fourth dynasty," and wore his gold, n tiara and t-A on tho thrones 4,000 years before tho wise meu followed the star of fate till it (topped over that lowly hovel in Bethle hem where tho infant Jcsas lay. Alykerinos was the builder of tho third pyramid at Ghizeh, where his' headless mummy was discovered in the year 1833. The storm coffin in which ho'wr,3 being ’lansportcd to England u is let at sea and lay at the bottom of the cean for two years before being recovered. It is : .-I 'x'tn that a man’s bones are subjected to vicissitudes, especially 5,000 or 0,000 ve us after bis death.—St. Louis Repub lic. A gtirng r ead out of /, • 1 t:,e ■ I'.- I rim I'm and ihdi man behind him and s od, put my head out?" "You head out of tho v your, lead in,” tpu l granger bUtfob ar : ins P'-t ''Why niL'it •.mo of the telegraph poh.-a dw ;q' ’•va* the answer; rih, that'a it. W .11, if they’re to mighty 'fraid of a lew old polos. I'll keep my bead in. That’s the way on tins railroads since that now law ■ wSll'r ^ 8W WorU. l*ri>g»*«Ht» la Artinoiul Kubber* The discovery made by Dr. H. A. Til- dia that Uioprouc, which can be prepared from turpeatiiie, under fcertain condi- tious changes into what appears to be genuine .ubber, has been followed up by experimunts. the result of which poiuts to an early utilization of thonew)irocoss. It is now announced that Boiichhardat lias produced the same change by heat, and the product is a material resembling pure Para rubber in every way and ame nable to vala»ftiMtlon,HN«w York Trie- EASILY MADE HAPPY. Dow » Rich Man I.earned Some Philoao- • •*— ithf oat Atrlch. gcu.tlemau.qf .my > got caught-pq .tha^r^iii ,t»l < while out For a'wailb way. He is not only .rich, hot eqcgqtric.i in that he rarely rides and that he walks a great deal. The rain that for a long -all time fell gently iucreaSed' W- klfiimtity L and'was paught, op by the neip^nd _ andj8..ot into faces and doorwayA, where people hoiiefully huddled for the time,- and, beat upon the a wrings and sigh's da ’ A if in mad de^ro tp.cnwb5^afg hn^-gat* j, at the hearts of those who had sougiw'- temporary shelter there. ' Tho gentleman, : althongh:protect9dLy a stout umbrella, was finally driven to one of these awnings.' wh^hce'he ' ^hred' , ! ’ <k up and down for any stray,.cab4that might come that way. By this process he saw a manxd&m£ down the street, dodging from arwoing to awning and doorway to, doorway. _ There were hundreds’of people going and coming, pushing or pulling umbrel las, or who, enveloped from head to heels in waterproofs, went edging along with '’’ one ear turned down to Windward^Mf to split the storm. But this particular man commanded his attention because ho had no umbrella and, no waterprqqf - r and although the day was cold not even an overcoat.' Ete ran awhile, then’patfseff in some friendly shelter to repeat the run to tho next, finally brihgingup undeF the same awning with my friend. Like most rich men of fhp World.my friend is suspicions of his kihd’uhleM they come properly introduced.. Bui be looked at this specimen oT saw at a glance thatrif Wks a veiy’WeiT specimen, plainly and ..lightly dadiLut-J with a frarik, manly, German, counte nance. Not having been addressed'bylti. '" ho felt still more intereifted^ f- s-wlw »■> - "Bad day for,you*’: bp said pteatftntly,.., bosom. ■ j#* 'J tsfcyn m v«f* "Got far to go?" ifalt ,qlu'vj.r—« ymr I’Right good bit,” said the Specimen. 1‘You’d betterjtake a sfifdbi'cdr. ’ 1 copes one going'riglit down Broadway." “No; Tin ^biTtg tfvbt ohrthe dtketaidd and then down the Hoijvqryv” ^ . :jr “Well, thftt is a .‘gQod hit.’ hnt you pap got a car over ' the/O'/ rSmdMcfelF' Ay*^ friend. ■ ** 'ire'." The specimen laughed*, (‘A steeet .par ^ is too rich for my blood today ,”said he.,, "Oh, I’ve got the money,” hb addea, std-"' log the cynical look-thatcanfelntcUia-.i gentleman’s face,, "hut, wapt ' something else. That's the reason Fife ; footing it. ril get Wet.’hut'whwYf■gebi* down to the place ! paa get (Irtedouttorv a glass of beer." . , .»* The perfect confidence of fhe Bbidlifi.'itti'' in his programme elicited the echo; -v "For a glass of beert" "Oh.yesl -You see,J '^at'dtop .'ttt td. expensive hotel It’s^he Pnhapj'jHoaM, down in Chatham square, and——'’ ‘ L : "Chatham square? Why, that’s mBet^ from herel” J .*. "I know that well enough, hAtl’dlffet therein an hqur ortwo, 1 'waa’thfl < dI(wF- ful reply, "When I dottlboyef-glWofy beer, tuid they. wUiletjji^ dry. the big stove. I can't get nuteh wettef> If I took'a atrtet cdr,'ydu «fefe ( ;PiMfavow beer and no place to dry.” -He.Un^ie^ fcgttiu. :; ■ ' f, .;V ' ‘ c a , "Yon don’t seem to mjid.it mhen.’! J,.- "Mind it! What’s the tfse? i’ll ba.flse4 all right in a day qr two. wtndaa.'fbF % little water—faugh 1'” The specimen shook himself like a young spaniel j'WelGjl must be running or I'll get cold,” Mid he, and he started off without more'prw .lipiinary. ■ - i ■ “Hold an. therel’; fhppted .th^ Mton- ished gentleman. ‘'Cpmobacknerq apio- mont.” The specimen fcdiiie' kfcWlybdnBf but he shivered in spite of his ah; qi,in difference, a . "Hqw much money have ywojjfdtyVlT ^Fifteen cents ifl walk—ten, cents ff! ride,” the specimen replied-rather shaine- fucedly. '' j iw i--V *?v» "Well, here; yon tide. V He.put ahalf dollar Into the specimen’s banil., , ■ ,;.i The specimen looked qt it a’moment like a flash, and catching tpe' giver’s hand before it could be withdrawn j ly pressed it to his lips. -There 1 nothing cringing or sycophantlc'ote v ing. There was nothing' of thdsoct jjaW. It was a grateful, impulsive exhibition of genuine gratitude for just one in stant; then with frank and glisteni&g eyes he said: "Ride? And FU oat too—and sleenti^ii bedl I'm tho happiest man in NewYorki’’ And the specimen dashed down* the street through the pelting rain, cut into Thirty-fifth street- and disappeared to ward tho oast side. And the rich gentle man looked up at the cloud Niven sky, shook the folds but of his silk umbrsUa and started buoyantly down, saying softly, “The happiest New York I”—New York Hefeld. ’ ' 4 ” 11 •• •> * *d Letter of a Suicide. ’ An octogenarian genertfi Teft a Mter lately defending the propriety, of hjasdi- cide. Said he; , .. . A : ' When an individual life has run Its cycle and become a waste' of 'Uature-rin the body, overwhelming its mental.(nd physical qualities with weakness and pain to an intolctabie degree, it) ‘Way with all propriety be remcr/edr : *sit Such being tho case ,vitli,.the lifa of the writer, his apology fo the woridliniy these terms made through hid inost' be loved and most intimate frienda. who, die trusts, will appreciate the rMief td_him from ceaseless distress, Which, in his Opin ion, ought to be brought by tbe phyieian who is summoned with his 3rpgS,,sui^ly for that purpose, but not rdr ctfife,— Boston Globe. '; . - ’.•.*■ :.!<* A \ cry A'ui-leal Culieei ' ' ' In U . ubanbe lioliuwed'out;bfi^tho trank oi’ a tree, was- found, at Bovey- Tracey, in Devousliirci It lay in ii de posit of brick earth more'tliali tW^iity- nine feet below the highest level .reached by the waters of the Bovpy.. It ..was more tin. r, thirty-five inches wide, and its leagtl' could not be exactly dcfoiihUied, tlie woi ucn baring broken it L> gening it out. An eminent archaeologist of opinion that this bout'dafea from tho glacial epoch—perhaps even frotH-ansora vemot'.' time. If this hypothesis, thwre- sponsibility of which wo leave Vo him, be correct, this is tho most ahcieaft-Nrit- ness in e.xistexico of prehistoric’ naviga tion.—" Manners and Monuments of . Jhe- historic Peoples.” A clu.i tuing lady of the oldsctioohwtio is a member of ono of the historicftlTam- ilies of Massachusetts; savsthatshbrnever goes V statue of her mosidtetinguisbed Irinsnian without wiekingitdidnot^and there in the son aud in .ibo..stpnns v . "Other people like statues,” she says, ■hut 1 dp not, ! don't like tb ‘ate my cousin rained on, and I ’(dwhtk ftel it when tho MOW T»WV) Nf^t, THIS PAGE CONTAINS FLAWS AND OTHER DEFECTS WHICH MAY APPEAR ON THE FILM. ;; thj ■ty”'