West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 22 Feb 1923, p. 2

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Your druggist seile a tiny bottle of "Freezons‘ for a few cents, suficient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, and the ca}â€" luses, without sorgness or {rritationy, Doeen‘t surt a bitt Drop « little "Â¥Freezons" on an aching corn, iastaat Iy that corn etops hurting, then short Iy you lift it right of with fingors Cruly! Lift Off with F ingers nuence, ano Lelit able, but still hi were people well : "What can I do "My dear mas« corns a case of su be relieved at once eran, who twenty 3 very interestine : { 1 know him slightly, it seems to Louis Chandier? Perhaps I met once or twice. But that is of no equence. What you have told me touched me deeply, and if you will * Alsl ene? They didr l’lv'it(!t’ hiS ‘ comfortal tuous studi 2â€"Seragy, w ce, and Be The Failure of Success CORNS The booklet will \be mailed frea to any one on request. Even to experienced investors this little story, woven into a charming romance, conâ€" tains many valuable pointers on investâ€" ments. A little booklet which tells in an interesting way, so simple in its language that a schoolâ€" girl could understand it, all about investments of al!l kinds, bonds, mortâ€" gages and stocks. Freeâ€" "A Financial Courtship‘ Pstablished 1891 BY FREDERIC BOUTET lated by Wm. L. McPhorson of "Count on me, madame. I will do everything in my power to relieve your sltuation," After fifteen minutes‘ convarsation they got up to go. Destranges iet Sergy pass out first. Then, to atone for the cruelty of his visit, he said to Mme. Chandier with genuine comâ€" passion: D Phegen ooo‘ on entcn doubtless ashamed and perhaps indigâ€" | nant, she had given no sign of ever having known her ealler. otsw _ _ Was she dominating her feeling or had she really rnoneâ€"too worn out by the daily struggle to have any pride left? Destranges lot Bergy do the talking. In a low voice, so as not to disturb the stck man, the latter told of their plans. Destranges eyed Marieâ€" Anve furtively. Now he had only pity‘ for her. He found that he had overâ€" done his trium»h. 1 I JTMITâ€"C6 Sdu nutls custed with floutr, _ They knocked at a door, which and enough milk to form a batter of opened into a bare studio, with crackâ€" such consistency that it will drop but ed and peeling walls. The harsh light not pour from a spoon. _ Bake in from the mansard windows accentuâ€"‘ greased muffin pans about oneâ€"half ated the poverty within. It was, howâ€"! hour. ever, a clean and selfâ€"respecting pov-] Excellent lemon mincemeatâ€"* cup erty, At the back, in an alcove, shut shortening, 2 large lemons, 1 tep. off by curtains, Chandier lay in a bed.! powdered cinnamon, 4 apples, 1 tsp. asleep. Destranges looked at Mme.f powdered ginger, 2 cups currants, 1 Chandier, who had opened the door tsp. salt, 14 cup chopped nut meats, %4 for them. How faded she was, how pound chopped and candied lemon thin, how much older! How she must peel, % tep. powdered allspice, 4 tsp. have suffered! Nevertheless, he disâ€"‘ grated nutmeg, 1% cups sugar, % tsp. covered in her saddened face some powdered cloves, 4 cup seeded raisins. traces of her former beauty. The Extract juice from lemons and remove blue eyes had paledâ€"washed out by pips. Now put lemons into saucepan, vigils and tearsâ€"Dut they still had cover with cold water, and boil until. that same, slow, deep and sincere look.| lemon foels quite tender. Change water Mme. Chandier had fixed it on Deâ€"| at least twice, drain and pound peel to stranges only for m moment when ; a paste, add apples (cored, peeled and Sergy presented him. Surprised,| chopood}. lemon nee!l skartaninp smm J ki% s ce . . P : _Now he recalled calmly the time _ when he had been in love with Maricâ€" ; Anne Deloire. She was the daughter > of an architect whose house he and ; Chandier ‘had frequented. She had | rejected him to marry Chandier, whom} she loved. That was all. For Deâ€" / stranges it had been a blow, cefrtainly.! _ More than that, it was a sort of mysti~| _ fication. That love should enter into his life, altogether consecrated to;' iwork and ambition, was for him a [ cause of astonishment. He could not understand why the young girl did not accept him at once. He felt al deep and bitter grudge against Marie-’ | Anne. At each success he obtained, at each step he made toward celebrity | and fortune, he thought: "She was ‘wrong. She must see itâ€"too late." | "1 pegret you." At the end of a long, dark streot near the Barrler the auto stopped beâ€" fore a shabby house. Destranges and Sergy climbed five flights of stairs and then a sort of ladder, hi inpmedioniccrant 2 | A Flapper, light and fluffy, kept & | Buperintendent _ _ """*‘ * * C ! Tea Shop, and her cakes Commnenmrmmenrecmmmmmmeennntsitinrecartecramnenen PA t | She served with such descretion that "==â€"=â€"===============â€"==â€"===â€"â€"â€" '6 e | , she never made mistakes. | eral hours. Slice the dates, dice \:': / She gave the Baker doughnuts and cupful of celery and add all to t 3e ’ the crusty folks a tart, | dressing, mixing thoroughly. Ser | The Drivers rolyâ€"polies (she werved in nests of lettuce. An equal qua: them a la carte). |tity of sweet or sour cream may | ‘The Grafter wanted sponge cake and Combined with the dressing if desire Complments of the Miser asked for gold, | Fruit tapiocaâ€"4 cup pearl tapioc #Â¥nmuys japvis #00 m» |How many rolls the Saflor had can 4 CupP almonds, 244 cups cold wate mmzw ercurmes l never now be told. | % tsp. salt, 1 inch stick cinnamon, P NC The man who deals in Real Estate and °UP 8ugar, 14 cup currant jelly, %4 cu owns his tidy cot | citron, 14 cup sherry wine or fru Was there; I don‘t know what he ate JUiCe, 4 cup seeded raisins.. Soa except it was a lot. Itapioca in cold water over night « The grave and stately Lawyer (assure for several hours. Cook in same wate me that you knew it) | in dvoub'lg boiler with salt and cinng % |Put in a plea for raisin cake richly mon until transparent. Remove fror arvIs eg % baked with suet. [range and add currant jelly, sherr o The pcople from apartments were Wing or fruit juice, almonds (blanct AIMITED alert for layer cakes; jed and shredded), raisins (cut i Bay St. Montreal | Reporters like the kind of cooky pieces) and citron (cut in thin slices) ronto London Eng | ___ pressed and stuffed with dates. _: Sweeten to taste. Turn into a servin ‘The Politician sought the kind all 4ish, cool slightly, and serve with thij | brown and full of plums; | eream,. ; The Gossips ate the spice cakes up and wussumsass m ce o ons menmpoecomenenre o roks. | even liked the crumbs. Spankâ€"and be Slender. memamee m nmeaemene n o es un ons rmmmepermmmsnmemenewc «n = i’The man who raced his aevroplane just] Slap! Slap! Slap! ME en iesns cramneecrcecenccamemmamemmemmcmememnaen, | made the drop cakes fly; No, all the children aren‘t naughty The Florist wanted seed cake and the It is just mothers, aunts, and, yes t bect that he could buy. | even the grandmothers trying to get C 0 The Idlers liked the loaf cakes and thin. The latest way is to spank th« $ the Prudes had angel food; | flesh off. With the palm of the hand a Eegees he gave the wise ones cocoanut and slap the offendin rt bri RIC BOUTET hoped it was not ‘rude. | firmly. Don‘t milfd Ii)?il: stinS:swa l;?td nemmmmemmmmmseee The Sculptor asked for marble cake, tle. That is the protest of the fat cells ‘m. L. McPherson.) which was no idle whim; |as they are battered down. Of course momevemmtnrsormentnnmssrnecmentee ~mwwmâ€"â€"â€"_â€"=â€"_.4f | The Smart Set wanted currant cakes they don‘t want to go. Who doesn‘t < eonsent, Monsieur Sergy, I will acâ€"] to be in Fashion‘s swim. | know that better than the fat woman. 1 company you toâ€"morrow on the visit The Football Boys had jumbles and Hasn‘t she been coaxing them for . you expect to make. I can then see‘ the Carpenter some "pound"; _ | years to leave her figure to its youthâ€" i better what is to be done." | The cup cakes went to any one who, ful curves? 1|__ "My dear master, I shall be only too' happened to be round. i It is best to begin at the bottom and ‘ happy. Will you allow me to come Th¢ Chauffeurs never tired of her slap your way up on the tooâ€"fat arm. / for you early toâ€"morrow afternoon?"| cakes with caraway, | That objectionable roll of fat at the | _ The callers got up. Destranges conâ€"| And battor cakes baked for the Nine back of the neck must be slapped with .‘ ducted them to the door of the stud~io‘ she found a clever play. | each hand alternately. Slap at the ‘and then returned to his chair and And then came JACK the daring, and middle of the neck, and slap out toâ€" lishted another cigarette. He tried‘ nothing would he take, | ward the shoulder, For the tooâ€"large unsuccessfully to clarify his feclings.! Ho asked the pretty Flapper to give abdomen lightly pinch the flesh away.i In spite of his habitual coldness he! him Wedding Cake; !Lifting‘ it between the thumb and the had been deeply stirred ‘on hearing She said: "Now don‘t be flip, Jack, but forefinger give it a good pinch and:‘ that nameâ€"Chandier. What had he! if you mean it true, then go right on to the next spot. | felt? Sorrow, joy, anger? He shrug. Just sip your tea until I rise and make _W-hen you reach your hips and | ged his shoulders. No; nothing of| _. the order ‘two.‘ " thighs you may slap until your arms! that sort. It was only a memory of She gave him Lady Fingers and a past emotionsâ€"older even than‘ "kiss" or two for funâ€" twenty years. "Phe Flapper‘s "Mrs. Flapâ€"Jack" now Now he recalled calmly the time! â€"and so this tale is done. eonsent, Monsieur Sergy, I will acâ€" company you toâ€"morrow on the visit you expect to make. I can then see better what is to be done." "My dear master, I shall be only too happy. Will you allow me to come for you early toâ€"morrow afternoon?" BÂ¥ FRAANK W ROLLINS | pepper. Thicken the sauce with | buttered bread crumbs. ""/ _ Liberty raisin breadâ€"1 cup butterâ€" ""| milk, 1 egg, 1 cup whole wheat flour, )e‘; 1 eup corn meal, 1 tsp. salt, 4 cup Iy' sugar, 4 tsp. baking powder, 1 cup ‘!â€"| geedless raisins (floured), 1 tsp soda *9/ (with 1 thsp. flour). Mix and sift dry t ingredients. Add wellâ€"beaten egg, 4/ buttermilk, and shortening. â€" Blend 0t well. Add raisins, Beat vigorously. 1Ԥ| Bake in a shallow pan for 30 minutes. Down town veal stewâ€"1‘%4 pounds lean veal, 4 thsp. vinegar, 14 tsp. ground cloves, 2 tsp. horseradish, 14 tep. ground cinnamon, seasoning of salt and pepper, 4 cun seeded raisins, buttered bread crumbs. Place the veal, which has been cut into inch pleces, in a casserole and stew slowly so that it will cook in its own juice without burning. When it is nearly done, add the vinegar, raisins, cloves, clnnlmorx.’ horseredish and seasoning of salt and rants, raising, salt, gpices, lemon juice, nut meats and sugar. Put into a jJar and cover. This mincemeat is excelâ€" lent for pies and tarts. Sufficient for four pies. All measurements are level. t o M snn n cce en eR Et c cover with cold water, and boil until lemon foels quite tender. Change water al least twice, drain and pound peel to a paste, add apples (cored, peeled and chopped), lemon peel, shortening, eurâ€" | _ Bran muffinsâ€"1 cup flour, 1 thsp. | shortening (melted), 1 tsp. sailt, 1 tsp. soda, %4 to 2 cups sour milk, 2 cups clean bran, % cup geeded raisins and | chopped nuts, 44 to 4 cup sweetening. | Sift together the flour, salt and soda and mix with this the bran. Add toâ€" gether the sweetening, melted shortâ€" ening and part of the milk; then mix with the dry materials Add the !raisins and nuts dusted with flour, and enough milk to form a batter of _such consistency that it will drop but! not pour from a spoon. Bake in greased muffin pans about oneâ€"half! hour. | LECC CUURIEL Wm. Stinson Remedy Co. of Canada. 2611 Â¥Yenge 8t, Toronto, Ont. Woman‘s Sphere Dishes You Will Like. A Culinary Romance. STINSON‘8 Home Treatment â€" for Epilepsy. Fite and Nervous Disorders. Thousands of gg. ters from satisied nserm, Bend â€" for frea booklet. â€"Stella Knight. the ‘ _ People who have to do with the ‘ education of deaf children usually ‘ classify them according to the age at which the denfness began: those who ; are born deaf, in which group are inâ€" cluded those who become deat before ;acquiring speech and 1ntelligence;a‘ those who become deaf between the . ages of six and sixteen; and those who become deaf after the age of sixteen. | _ Children of the first class will grow | up to be deafâ€"mutes unless taken in hand early and taught by scientific methods to articulate. Members of the family should speak to them loud and distinctly close to the ear. The whole family must be made to realize that here is an opportunity to do great| It is hard to say which is the great. er handicap to a child, total blindness or total deafness. Fortunately, neither congenital deafness nor deafness acâ€" quired in infancy from any disease exâ€" cept meningitis, which destroys the nervous mechanism of soundâ€"wave apâ€" preciation, is ever total. Though iuf-‘ ferers may hear no ordinary sounds at a distance of more than a few] inches from the ear almost all of them can hear words spoken clearly an lnehl or two away. Here‘s nearly the end of the article and I think I hear sighs of reliof, "She hasn‘t written one word about diet." Of course I haven‘t. I would rather write about creams, lotions, soaps, and salts that can reduce. They are muchl more interesting. Thore‘s another dangerâ€"wrinkles. The skin, you know, reduces more slowly than tho cells of the body, so look out for ugly, pouchy lines. Once a day bathe your face in a special loâ€" tion that looks like strained honey and caraway seeds. It braces up the flabby flesh and keeps the skin firm and taut over the vanishing fat cells. Or else try the whiteâ€"ofâ€"egg mask. When you reach your hips and thighs you may slap until your arms are ready to drop. Some women who want to reduce in a hurry use little wooden paddles that beat the fat away in no time. Don‘t be overzealous. If you bruise your skin you will have to‘ wait until the black and blue mark.s, go away before you can resume the patting. The fat cells don‘t wait.! They come back just as fast as they| can. And when you are ready to reâ€"| sume your treatment you will find all! the former work undone. That is the danger of going too fast in reducing. CUR NEW SERIAL Spankâ€"and be Slender. | Slap! Slap! Slap! No, all the children aren‘t naughty. _ It is just mothers, aunts, and, yes, | even the grandmothers trying to get thin. The latest way is to spank the | flesh off. With the palm of the hand slap the offending part briskly and | firmly. Don‘t mind if it stings a Iit-“ tle. That is the protest of the fat cells! as they are battered down. Of course they don‘t want to go. Who doesn‘t | know that better than the fat woman.l Hasn‘t she been coaxing them for years to leave her figure to its youth-] ful curves? | _ Fruit tapiocaâ€"% cup pearl tapioca, 14 cup almonds, 2% cups cold water, | % tsp. salt, 1 inch stick cinnamon, 4 cup sugar, i4 cup currant jelly, 4 cup { citron, 14 cup sherry wine or fruit ‘juice, %4 cup seeded raisins. Soak | tapioca in cold water over night or _for several hours. Cook in same water |in double boiler with salt and cinnaâ€" _mon until transparent. Remove from: range and add currant jelly, sherry wine or fruit juice, almonds (blanchâ€" | eral hours. Slice the dates, dice a cupful of celery and add all to the | dressing, mixing thoroughly. Serve in nests of lettuce. An equal quanâ€" |tity of sweet or sour cream may be combined with the dressing if desired. ed and shredded), raisins (cut in pieces) and citron (cut in thin slices). Sweeten to taste. Turn into a serving dish, cool slightly, and serve with thin cream. ln? to young women, having the reâ€" quired education, and desirous of beâ€" coming nurses. ‘This Hospital has adopted the eightâ€"hour -zntem. The pupi!is recelve uniforms of the School, & mon‘.hl{ allowance and travelling expenses to and from New York. For further information apply to the Superintendent. The Toronto Hospital for Incurâ€" ables, in affiliation with Bellevue and Am.& Hospitals, New York City, gflen a three years‘ Course of Trainâ€" The Child Born Deaf. NURSES 8T. LAWBENCND MARXET, TORONT@ We pay highest prices for Poultry, and are paying 650 per lb. for Gooze Feathers; also 850 per lb. for Duck Feuthers. We will sond you an inter» eating price list if you will write to Abivi l in chne. The most precious deposits are the deposits of affection and friendship and love for you laid up in the hearts of your fellowâ€"mortals. Poultry & Feathers We pay highest prices for Poultry. and Removes Tight Can Lids. A tool has been invented to remove tight fitting milk can lids without damâ€" aging them. f Those who become deaf during J school age will have learned to speak, | but if neglected will never learn the speech of educated adults and may _ even forget much that they have acâ€" :iquired. Those who become deaf after ; sixteen or seventeen are in the class © | of the adult deaf and must in geneml‘ ©;ilook to themselves to acquire new *\ knowledge and to retain what tzhey' ©/ elready possess. | Every "Diamond Dyos" package gte!ls how to dye or tint any worn,, | faded garment or drapery a new rich color that will not streak, spot, fade, :or run. Perfect home dyeing is guarâ€" . anteed with Diamond Dyes even if you | | have never dyed beforc. Just teil your! ,drugglst whether the material you | wish to dyoe is wool or silk, or whether ; it is linen, cotcon, or mixed goods. Fm'g fiftyâ€"one years millions of women have j 1been using "Diamonc Dyes" to add | years of wear to their old, shabby, ’ walsts, skirts, dresses, coats, sweaters, stockings, draperios, hangings, everyâ€" thing! Minard‘s Lin!ment for Coughs & Coids. First English Lawyeress, Miss Monica Cobb not only has the distinction of being the first woman lawyer to appear in the Eiglish courts, but won her first case as well. Dye Faded Sweater _ Skirt, Draperies in Diamond Dyes "Oh, George!" she exclaimed, "they give blue coupons with each package, and for one hundred coupons you can get the loveliest rocking chair! You have only to eat ninety more pack ages!" "How does it hapf)eu that we have this every morning?" ho asked. good, and that, Iif they selfishly refuse to take the trouble to speak loud and distinetly, the child will grow up with the enormously gresier handicap of inability to talk properlyâ€"and they will be responsible for his condition just as much as if they had cut out his tongue! } Every day since they had started housekeeping his bride had given him the same kind of breakfast food, and finally he mustered up courage to make a gentle inquiry. LINES & C0., LiMITED That rich, fruity Juscious cake that doesn‘t crumble and dry out. s The kind that you have always likedâ€"the kind you mean when you say "‘fruit LLos That tender, almost juicy cake with the rare favor of delicious raisins and piquant spice. The Kind That Makes You Like Fruit Cake ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO 4A Coâ€"operative Organization ‘The Reason. ative Organization Comprising 14,000 Grower Mewmbers Drzer. Nâ€"533â€"31, FrEsNo, Caumrorxia. â€"»Maid Raisin Growers pome» ao «es en ces coame ware ce coan com o se NAMz.... Sraesr Sunâ€"Maid Raisin CGrowore, Dept. Nâ€"533â€"31, Fresno, California, Please send me copy of your free book "Recipes with Raisins." CUT THIS OUT AnNp sExnp IT wi 2 +120 UU L _ AND SEN vees »essnuns samns sn You‘ll enjoy fruit cake more often when you can secure such good cake readyâ€"made. Mail coupon for free book of tested recipes supgesting scores of other luscious raisin foods. Thess plump, tender, juicy, thinâ€"skinned raisins are ideal for cake, Taste the cake you get and sce. just the kind you likeâ€"and save baking at home. BuackMmicuT Shallow men believe in luck, strong men in cause and effect. When men cease to improve themâ€" selves and their conditions, society is in danger. STOVE POLISH Vill V Am. Fac To be young and poor is a blessing end an asset. To be old and dependâ€" ent is a calamity. In order to make sure of a competence and independâ€" ence for old age, we must make the first part of life take care of the last. Minard‘s Liniment for Burns & Scalds WRIGLEY‘S is a belper in all this work â€"a pleasant, beneficial pickâ€"meâ€"up. PROYINCH Sound teeth, a good eappetite and proper digestion mean MUCH to your health. WRIGLEYS. abaasesmmens es The audience ;n.fid, but no one 1# lished the girls discomfture morg than Jones. Jones was quick to seize the oppor tanity, "Will you let me out, please*" Whereupon the girls rose. _ Jones then sat down again,. After several turns a comedian ap» peared who ausked the audience: "If there are any girle present who coul4 learn to love me, please stend?" As luck would have It, he was given a ticket for the seat next to thosse o0 onplpd by the girl=. Jones, while buying a ticket for & musicâ€"hall show, was radely brushet aside by three fappers, who got their tickets before him. The happy medium in mouths should have straight lips, not too thin, but or symmetrical fullness and with » slight upward inclination et the comers to denote merriment, Bhould this up ward curve be ready to dimple deoply on provocation, this denotes a quick power of repartee and a reaiy hut not ma‘liclous love of ridicule. Very red, thin lips denote cruelty; an underlip which has too full an outâ€" ward roll denotes lack of conscion: e; wiile when a mouth is long and thin, with the line between the lips clear cut and firm, its owner is usually mor bid, selfish, and dominating. Fow people realize the importance of the lips as a gulde to character, Husbandâ€"scekers should beware of & tendency to let the cormners of the mouth droopâ€"nothing wains a man of a worrying, Erizzrling temperament more than that. Yet to much of an up» ward curve denotes frivolity, It is the custom to judge the chan acter of persons with whom one comes in contact by looking closely at their eyes and the straightnoss, or other wise, of their glances. In support of this story it is inter. esting to know that the estate to which the stolen title deeds wore sa‘ld to refer is still owned by a family called Horner. â€" Unfortunately, how» ever, they say that their estate was bought from Henry VIIL, and that there never was euch a ple as desâ€" cribed in the story. So what are we to believe? deeds), 3 s Ard said, ‘What a good boy am 1‘ " As in those days, however, the roads were infested with robbers, the doods were hidden in a huge pic, which was entrusted to John Horner. But, desâ€" pite this care, the deeds never reached the King, for, as you know, Jack Horner:â€" "Put in a thumb And pulled out a plumb (the title "Jack Horner‘ 4s reputed to have lived in the reign of Henry VIIH. A: that time a certain abbot wished to send the title doeds of some property to the King. "Mother Goose" is another panto mime with a good deal of truth be hind it There once lived in Boston a widow who had six childrea. In time she married Isaac Goose, a man with ten children. With so many childrea, she, of course, "didn‘t know what to d0," hence the rhyme and the wollâ€" known pantomime. The original Crusoe was n: Alexander Selkirk, and it was w serving as a sailing mastor tha committed some breach of the « regulations, for which the captain him ashore on the island of Juan pandez, off the Chilian coast, and him to his fate. There bhe roma five years, until he was resoued â€" Captain Rogers and brought bac England. i The exact spot was, of course, | chosen by an arrow shot from the nea: ‘by Hall when Robin realized th«t he | was dying. There are poople, how ever, who scofl, and say an arrow 'oould not posibly have been shot s« | great a distance, but, nevertheless, tho |matter has been never properly set tled either way. As an epitaph form erly on the grave said:â€" "Here underneath this lHtile stone ' ies Robert, Farl of Huntington, No archer was as he so good, And people called him Robin Hood." Another famous pantomime hero is Robinson Crusoe, and perhaps his tals is as closely founded on fact as any of the Christmas stage stories. Bome of you will perhaps have vistt ed Kirkless Hall, near Doncaster, where that famous hero of pantomimse Robin Hood, is said to bave been blod to death by a faithless nun, and noo by you will, perbhaps, have soen the grave where, according to tradition the famous outlaw is buried. A number of you will bave seon the stone on Highgate Hill, marking the spot where Dick Whittington eat and beard the bells of London town sing "Turn egain, Whittington, thrice May or of London Town." But the curious thing is that the Sir Richard Whitting. ton who is supposed to have been the original "Dick" was four times Lord Mayor, and, as far as is known, never had a cat. Many of them are entirely fanciful, but others are supposed to be based on things that really happened, and tradt tion in many cases points out the #pots where these legends took place. Have you ever thought how we first got those wondorful stories that are sâ€"own on the stageâ€""Mother Googs," "Humpty Dumpty," "Jack Horner," and all the rest of them? Getting His Own Back Watch Your Lips. Popular Stories Founded on Fact The Real Robin Hood. The cbject of this d vige of our farm reade @uthority on ail subje Address all quest! cars of The Wilson P to, and answers wili a In which they are re tion this paper. As epa Immediate reply is m @ressec envelops be the anewor will be ma disl fac ear whi the and and yel of the 1 the pla BÂ¥ qu) MA fer mant spot, pate) C, H. R.:â€" nearly all fr five of thom are very dis or a cur Anses d 141 CcunDuCcTED B p n# a 3 h hy TCJ . Y W

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