Evening Star Newspaper, October 20, 1925, Page 34

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WOMAN NS PAGE. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON GREATEST EXPERIMENT OF THE CENTURY Noted Investigator and Writer Goes to the Jerusalem of Today and Tells the Story of What Modern Methods Are Accomplishing in the Holy Land. ARTICLE 11 By Sophie Irene Loeb. JERUSALEM. “Ah, me, to change places with the mayor of New York for a year or| 1wo,” was my greeting from the mayor | of Jerusalem. Ilagheb el Nashashiht “I would like to know how it feels to have enough money wi.n which o | yun the city. Your strects must truly | le paved with gold if you have the budgets I hear azhout. It must be| wonderful to be in City Hall, Xow[ York, and have them hand you mil- | lions of dol to pave streets and | Puild roads and open parks and sub- | ways. | Jem the Ge it is a different story, | far from being true to its name from the clvic point of view All this in broken F held forth Ides glish, the Arab | serious mien. | e mavor, & me wha the way of a future city— ve some vision. which we were seated is Outside, however, f Arab lackeys to | » the office. All to me for the to inform me being rebuilt. The room nbout 10x15 feet 1end suft of them made apolo; old stairs, etc., e the City Hall is New in the 0ld. “It is a big job I have,” said his honor. “I would try to see the mayor of New York try to run Jerusalem on budget of $323 per vear. The people here clamor for just as many | improvements as they do in vour city It a new world we are living in—in this oldest city of t What with the ruc graph and the quick transportation, it has brought the New World to our | very doors, and we are no longer sat- isfied with the old order. The younger generation is demanding a new Jeru- | salem, and we are getting it faster than all the ancient natriarchs buried Yiere ever dreamed. W hen you stop to think that before the war we had an nunual appropriation of approximately $125,000, which probably doesn't cover one of vour smallest departments in o and the tele- “But, alas! Jerusalem—Jerusa- |’ ki Wl OLD MARKET STREE to harness the Jordan and New York, you can readily see that we have gone a considerable distance to | bring it up to the present standard. Mayor's Only Need. “We have built 24 new roads in five vears of my regime—more than in a’ century before that. We have widened and repaired many of the old cnes. The roads were so narrow two cars could not pass. You see, they | were not built for automobiles, only for caravans. We are getting some | electricity. and pretty soon the whole | city will be electrified. ‘All we need is mo hard to ge and that is | dren carr hoping | bring the water to Jerusalem. “Can you picture mothers and chil- ing their water daily from places in tin cans their on their shoulders? And must do for drinking and little for bathing, I am afraid smiled sadl; he water has to be purchased by the people and is a great burden on them. Big Job for Police. nitation, therefore, must sarily be of low standard, but hope: we have great hopes. Nothi Stop Jerusalem from t cities of the central neces THE MAYOR OF JER! 1 very poor. ¢ revenue from the tizens has not increased in a gener: tion because of the poverty that ob-| Tains here. But with the new state of tairs, with new elements coming in the Jewish settle the tourists, it is an entirely different proposition “One of our Liggest problems,” the mayor, “is that of water. people have been very patient. Im ne if you can millions of people liv- in New York depending entirely 1 rain water. Well, that is our situa- | on. And this year there has been drought. The rainfall was below ormal and conside sle hardship ha ulted. Ves have some engineers vorking on the problem and we are| As a Child. Now and then children do dreadful things; things that, if they were «dults, would bring them into conflict with the law courts. When they do such things the family usually keep ihe happening secret. It would never do to let the neighbors know the child had done such a thing lest they fancy him a minal or insane. So each troubled parent fancies child to be abnormal or dangerou: close to the edge of trouble. The children between 12 and 20, boys and girls alike, are likely, once in their career if not oftener, to shock their families by some untoward action. They set all tradition at de- fiance and run away, taking money enough to carry them out of reach for & time. They set fire to the house or the barn. They apparently plot mis- chief. They display traits that strike cold terror to the hearts of their people. I am not trying to say that these demonstrations are trifling. They are to be taken serlously and the child is to be corrected and set right after his experience in dark ways. But I am saying he {s not to be condemned as potential criminal because he has llowed the usual line of his growth. | 7o human race has committed every | =in on the calender and it would be strange of a generation if its vouth skipped the practice of the fathers. What the child does he does as a child, not as ap adult. He has not the experience nor the memories nor the judgments of an adult. He has surging within him all the impulses ot his ancestors and has not yet set up any of the mental machinery that controls and checks them. He is a / | Besides, | with them. | situation. t improvements E recently we de- veloped a cosmopolitan police depart- ment. Traffic rules were necessitated, and I believe if a New York policeman lem he would find on important corner a traffic man, as busy as he is on Broadway. “I venture to say that if he tried to take our policeman’s place he would find it a bit disconcerting, what with the biles and busses different dire all trying to go in ions at the same time. he would have to know how ordl in three languages ic, Hebrew and English, the ofil- 1 tongues. Oh, ., the New York to glve A « s, child in experience and in thought and control. He has been taught many words but the meaning of them is not yet clear and will not be so for years to come. It is by these painful mis- takes that he learns. The lessons are costly d often dangerous. As far as possible let him shoulder the consequences of his mistake. What punishment you administer should b ar some relation to the and it must never take the beating. Beating an ado- n with words, is a reat and grave mistake. Teach him that the only way to correct a wrong action is by doing a ®ood one in i Repentance without deeds is empty as faith without acts. Teach him not to allow his conscience to rest until he has done something that cost him thought and time and energy to show fruits of repentance. It helps to talk over their penance with them and agree upon its form. Be careful not leave it entirely to them, for some of them will be too severe upon themselves and some of them not severe enough. Talk it over Listen to their confession and their wish for forgiveness. Then discuss the ways and means. Avoid public apologies, even private ones, unless they are voluntary. They are often the most useless and hypo- critical of affairs—just words said over to escape from an unpleasant Put deeds in their stead. Be merciful to erring youth. Be hope- ful for them and inspire them with hope for themselves. (Copyright, 1925.) Mr. Patri will givo personal attention to {pauiries from pacents oF school teachers on the care and d!VeloTlnH“ of children. rite bim I’ caro of hls “paper. “inclosize solf- addressed envelope for rebis. ve have | amels and donkeys and automo- | 5 TO BE REPLACED BY ] policem |in Jeru: other as well | Jerusalem is being the most modern lines. New homes erected outside of re planned with the ments. We hope very soon the - same must be munici 0 that ulated. the New developed along P Iat est improvy | people can be proper No Graft. “Before the war we had seven of- | ficlals to run t N 300. " Are we T York?" he asked, smilingl there is not much chance here,” he winked knowing with only § )0 in the treasur “What do you think the m | New York would do if he had to 1 to all the languages in the world und | had all religions {our job here. Jerusal { 000 " inhabitants, boasts tongue and eve | this, but you s | somewhere and vou find you are en- | croaching on some religious right that must_be ironed out and sfied before you can do anything | further. 3 |, “But we are ‘coming—coming fast. | And vou can go back to New York |and tell them so. They will be glad to come hera from Fifth Avenue, Riverside Drive and Broadway to view the oldest and best city in the world. i | | = | Mayor Invites Tourists. | _“Where heretofore the tourist has stopped at Egypt because of the | desert roads snd railroads and the | bardships he had to encounter before {entering Palestine, today it is quite | different i »vernight An auto- v is now being | built with a_pr © bridge across the Suez b will bring thousands | _“And the more of them that | the better. American money will go a long way toward preserving the places and making Jerusalem a ice to which to come for & sojowrn. “Aside from the valuable historic spots the climate here is better than any in the world. In the Spring the Judean hills are filled with flowers and the place i{s a garden spot,” proclaimed with no I pride. ““Our big tusk is to preserve all the holy places intact; to defend them from en- croachments: and at the same time produce u modern city—fine hotels. parks, playgrounds, just as any other great center of the world. What city | deserves it more than this city that | harbors the history of all the world?” | 1 auite agree with his outlook. World's Greatest City. T whnt home with the mayor and | had tea with him and his pretty wite. | He lives outside the anclent section, and from his upper porch 1 could look {out over the whole city of Jerusalem, jold and new. And the little woman jcomplained to me how. day and night | her hushand worked even harder than | the mayor of New York, because the {miyor of the metropolis could delegate |much of his job to his department | heads, but as vet the. mayor of Jeru- { salem is the department head and the whole works. As we looked over the glorious land- scape of temple towers, the closed golden gate which the Messiah is vet to open, the old synagogues, the { Church of the Holy Sepulchre, the circular domes, the great walls, the winding ways, he waved his hand over it all, crying, “Is it not the greatest |city in the world? The whole uni- verse will recognize it as such!” But to return to civics. “Our ave. nues are to be wider,” Le explained. “We are constantly opening up new streets, although we hope to retain the charm of all the old ones. We now can boast of a street cleaning { department and a new type of water | sprinklef. We are very proud of this, { We are numbering our houses, and have already inaugurated u city plan- | ning commission. But vou will have | to ask the Governor about all of this, {for I cannot talk politics. That is the Governor's Job." Jews and Arabs. And they have politics in Jer ) Jjust as intricate, Just a ffix‘ce(‘l“l?.flljeu!:l as controversial ‘and just as bad in spots, as I found out, as we have in our little Old New York. But he was willing to talk about the lnln[ Palestine. + Jawien il “I can see no reason why the and the Arabs cannot wor}l,( log;‘leh'!: In this great country. There is room for all, and up to the present time there have been no serfous quarrels, What little dissension arose at the beginning has been smoothed out, and I bhelieve it is the desire at least of the yvounger and vigorous and open- minded group of Arabs to do every- | thing they can to work amicably with the Jew v that the Jews have "ome, I I “We must sa | brought considerable progress, and as they are mainly spending their own money in developing the country it would be wrong not to give them credit for such efforts in trying te make the future and better Palestire. “And our new post office.” he:con- tinued. ‘““We are very proud of that. We have large incoming and -eut- going mails. We don't want to stand the old | settled and | still. Watch us. We are_going to profit by your wisdom. You. have had to go through a lot of growing pains and through the elimination process. We will take advantage of it. “No unsightly billbeard signs will Wwe permit in Jerusalem; no street cars with the miserable tracks that have outgrown their usefulness. And as to subways, who knows—we may develop the airplane for common use to fly overhead instead of having transit underneath. We fly almost daily from here to Bagdad, Damascus and other points of impgrtance. Pales- tine, with its great valleys and hills, lends itself beautifully to airplanes. hrough our City Planning Com mission we have already passed one ordinance that aims to avoid unsightly bulldings, haphazard _architectur We mean to produce things in con- formity with that which is already 50 beautiful here—the anclent out- lines and the artistic contour.” Yes, Mayor lem ‘wants to come to America to see the golden streets whence comes ull the mone he repeated, “If only I could exchange places with the Mayor of New York and get some of that money—ah me, what wonders we could produce here in Jerusalem.” (Copyright. 1925.) (Continued in Tomorrow's Star.) AUTUMN BY D. C. rlu'r—'nz. Gentians. When the vear is old, and the last crickets chirp in frosty meadows, and {the grackles, for a space, fill the of their talk, the gentians bloom. They make the tenth month of the vear somehow more precious for their sparse and Jovely blooming, und the cobalt of their blossoms is like a bit of October’s own intense blue sky dropped down on earth They keep some delicate charm af | Spring wildflowers, do the gentlans, {just us the Indian Summer weathe itself has that warm, prescient tender- ness of a March day. But March {means the birth of the year, and comes heralded by the dear blue flowers of hepatica. The darker, sad der blue of genttuns is death’s hand writing upon the grass. In open meadows und the wayside ditches, there the gentians grow. | the District of Columbin there are but three kinds, nor do we have the won- dr lacy, fringed gentian that is as lovely as blue eyes with long lashes. But our gentlans have a about them, for two of them are tight Iy closed. “Blue-bottles.” people sometimes call them, and indeed th deserve the name. to open, to rem They appear never in eternally in bud, flowers that never leave the sheltered childhood of thefr lives. The other of our gentiuns lacks the marvelous blue of the closed or bottle gentians, for it is a p ETe ish vellow, like the color seen in Winter sunsets, but its patrician and symmetrical corolla stands fully opened to receive the visits of its insect guests. It has no secret to guard, Itke the bottle gen ns: it makes no mystery of how it g pollen. | ] Nashashibi of Jerusa-| And as I left him, again | | bushes Ly the river with the warfare | In| mystery | - | possess receives the wondrous gift of fertiliz. | TUESDAY, MOTHERS AND THEIR CHILDREN. O One mother say: I found when my little girl was ill with a feverish spell that the in- tricate pattern of the wallpaper was proving an extreme frritation. She complained that she kept trying to follow the interwoven scrolls to their ends and never could, and also that a prancing horse in a picture made her feel go tired. I saw that some thing must be done if her tempera- ture was to be reduced, so moved her into a room with plain gray walls, minus pictures, and containing the | simplest furnishings. She soon fell into a refreshing sleep. | What Tomorrow Means to Yoy BY MARY BLAKE. Tomorrow's planetary aspects are not reveal any favorable influences, they are, on the other hand, far from adverse. During the evening they as- sume n definite character and become exceedingly propitious. When uncer- tainty prevalls it would be foolish to | tempt the fates by attempting some- | thing the outc | vour mind, be in doubt | it under such circumstances to do the appointed dally task and be satisfied. The influences toward the end of the day will be quite emotional, and all | that is good and true in you will be aroused.” The best thing to do is to allow such impulses full sway. “Troth plighting” will be facilitated, and those who do never have occasion to regret it. | Children born tomorrow will go through infuncy with little or no trou- ble. In their teens, however, they will bo liable to experfence ut least one | serious {llness, which will evoke anx- fety and demand watchful care. In | disposition they will be quick-temper ed und have very little control over their emotions. Impulsive and hasty, they will at all times need a guiding and restreining hand. Affection will accomplish more for these children than reproof and punishmer They will be truthful, unimated Ligh | Ideals of honor and courage and al- ways willing to sacrifice themselves { for those they love. | If tomorrow is your birthday ach executive abilit netic personality and are a bo You have great persuasive powers and can generally make others see as you see and think as you think. In your social life you plan most of the affairs that your circle enjoys, and others are willing that you should do this, as you have the knack of making people feel at ease, and you always appear to great advantuge | In business you are just { cesstul, and can usually induc {to do pleasantly that which, another, would be irksome | noying. b; vou @ mug- leader. | sther under and an- WHEN WE GO SHOPPING BY MRS. HARLAND H. ALLEN. How Silks Get Their Shades. "rtain something” about” silk seems to make brilliant colort able. And so the word “silk’ prob- to vour mind lengths of {the material in brightly shimmering. beautifully glossy colors. ! These brilliunt colorings in which you nearly all the cloth at the silk counter are attained in one of ltwo ways; by dyeing the silk skeins | before they woven into cloth, or by dyeing the silk-in-the.piece. The Ifirst method, 3 veing, consists of | three steps f, weighting and dyeinz “Bolling-off " involves removal of all { gum from the raw siik, it in hot soap suds. This step leaves the silk, not only free from gum, but soft, ‘white and glossy. The “boiling- off” process is used on nearly all silks except those intended for gauzy crepey effects. Yor such materials, the gum facflitates giving the neces. sary hard twist, and so is not removed until later in the dyeing procedure. Next comes “weighting.” The re moval of the gum in the * process has reduced the weight of the silk ubout one-fourth, and it is perfect- Iy legitimate, since the silk is sold by welght, for the manufacturer to make | up this loss. This he does by ‘‘weight- harmtul, or with salts of tin and iron, which are harmful. A silk that is weighed too heavily can be sold at a low price, but it will not wear well. naily, the yarn goes to the dye- room, and is put into a steaming hot bath.” Sticke ure used to stir the silk The Cheerful Cherub, Unless we can master our own desires They ssy we can A ‘mbk' Fl'. —_— sensi| ht and a trve em, But a little annoying tc me. RN s suit- | by immersing | boiting-off” ing” with sugar of lead, which is not | | about constantly while it is in the | water. When the siik is to be of light color. | the goods are bieached before they ure | dyed. tretching” is w final step sometimes used to increase the luster of the silk. The varn is either hung over a pex ted about, or it is stretched Ly a machine. Piece-dvelng ulso includes, first step, the boiling-off proc the 5oods have been woven with the gum left in the threads. However, are seldom weighted. g is shmply boiled off: and then the goods are either prepared for printing or go at once into the dye | pot Sometimes the silk yarns are soaked {d—that is the proe- its since which give: Characteristic “scroop” or rustle. History of Pour Name BY PHILIP FRANCIS NOWLAN. KENDALL VARIATION—Kendal, RACIAL ORIGIN—English. SOURCE—A locality. Kendall is a fairly | name, but comparatively few persons | know that it was, and still is, the | name of a place in England, and that the family name {s but a development of the place name. Kendal Is the name of a town in Westmoreland. The meaning of the name is clear when vou know that the village was built near the River Ken. It is merely a combination of the name of the river with the word ‘“dale,” meaning a valley, and occur- ring as often-in English nomenclature as the ending “thal” is in German. It was just the sort of place to give rise to many family names, for it was the sort of place that men came from rather than went to. of thie sert-are always founded on the places that men came from. In Kendal, for instance, there would have been no point in referring to a man as “Walter of Kendal. Like- wise, in London it would have meant nothing to speak of ‘‘Walter of Lon- don.” Not even in Kendal would a t | to be called this, for there were so many Walters in and from London all over the country that the identity of the individual would not be clearly brought out. But there would not likely be more than one Walter from Kendal in Londo: Full of Goodness "SALADA’ T E A is pure—delicious—wholesome. AsK your grocer for a pacKkage. Black, Green o e Mixed Blends. quite complex, as, although they do | me of which would, in | Far better is | plight their troth” will | to vour silk gown its | common family | Family names | Walter from London have been likely | CTOBER 20, 19 THE WIDOW’S MIGHT FEATURES HOME NOTES BY JENNY WREN BY HAZEL DEYO BATCHELOR Fay Carson does some important shopping. CHAPTER 11 Fay had arrived at a definite con- clusion. She was not attractive to | men. It was not because she lacked good looks. She was modest, but not blind, and one night, after locking her- self in her room and subjecting her- self to a thorough examination with the help .of her mirror, she decided thut if she were not beautiful she certainly was not ugly She was tall, but reedy in her slen- derness. She had small features with the exception of her mouth, whic though wide, was beautifully cut. Her lips were straight with the serious ex- | pression of a child, and her eyes, too, | | were serious and of a strangely beau. | tiful color, like clear amber. Her hair | was very soft and fine and had amber glints in it. Certainly Fay was not plain, and yet she wus not attractive to men, There was about her an : dence which, although she was o of, she could not seem to conquer. Left alone with a man, she was stiff and shy, answering in monosyllables and giving the impression of being thoroughly uninteresting. Men al- | wuys pussed her by, esgerly turning | attention to girls who, although not nearly so pretty as Fiy, had charm and personality. Most of the men she met did not even know what sh looked like, und she was miserably aware of this fact. “What I lack s personality,” she decided, and, having come to this con. clusion, she bought several bocks on the subject of developing her person j ality. Shortly after she had perused “Per- sonality Plus,” “Are You a Success Several Short-Cuts she happened to read one of the season's best sellers. It was a novel woven about the life of u young followed the career of th athless inter- f diff r of a b she went Kitty had al Peter and Whitefoot. And in their thrift take Yonest pride { The wise for future wante provids i tetoot the Wood Mouse Peter Rabbit { the afterncon watchin d the others feasting on beechnut They ied to enfoy them so m {that he almost wished he liked t} { him Toward night ‘1 ¥ away to see who else he couid find or a while his cousin, Jumper the Hare, was the only one whom he met | He stopped to gos him a w and then c Gent Mistre up above the tre little lanes of moonlight L | the « betw ung around most of | 1 through | n the Black | 4 WAL | LOWING YOUR HEART?' DE- | MANDED PETE | Shadows. Peter was over edge of the Green Forest. Suddenl !not far from him Hooty the Ow {hooted. Peter froze right where he | : that is. he sat perfectly motion- | But inside his heart was go. bump. thumpity-bumb, | | thumpity-bump. Again Hooty hooted, {and Peter continued to sit there { thumplty-bumping. | After a long time Mooty hoo {again, but this time he was far aw: {and Peter's heart no longer thumpity | bumped. i My, I'm glad awayi” said a thin, squeaky voice i have to swallow my heart every time | 'T hear him.” | Peter turned. Therc sat little | Whitefoot the Wood Mouse, washing | | his face with his little white hands. | A'hat do you mean by swallowing | your heart?” demunded Veter. ] “I mean,” replied Whitefoot. “‘that | | when Hooty is as close s he was to- | night and hoots, my heart just seems to jump right up in my throat. o, | | of course, I have to swallow it to get | !it down where {t belongs.” | Peter knew just what Whitefoot | meant. He had felt just that way | himself. Of course, that little heart of | | Whitefoot's didn’t really jump up into | | his throat. and, of course, he really | didn’t swallow it. It just seemed that | way. | “w re you doing here, White- | foot?” Peter asked. | | “I should say that was the ques. { tion for me to ask. Wha e you do- | |ing here, Peter Rabb inquired | Whitefoot. “Oh,” said Peter, “I'm just looking around. I'm finding eut how fol near ‘les: ting t ted that fellow's use LA o CHOEOLAT Pure chocolate, strained honey, crystal sugsr syrup and finest malt, scientifically blended (from a French formuls) in liquid form ready to use for all chocolate drinks, and as 3 topping for fee cream and desserts. Rich in vitamins, highly nutritious and easily di- gested. Use it just as it «comes from the tin. Children love it and thrive on it. Mede s the milkion doller Mewis piont ot Baisimore, Mh. long list of admirers re attendance upon her about among them, and the reason for this was the fact that Kitty I pened to be « According a widow was far more | Birl who had never Leen married poise sophisticated ui men. plquant, ul satd t way, Fay even only onl. auite oceur she would have to lo; was perhaps very de: In riage was hardly touched upon. the hook opened, she had already be think thing sort. | Kitty 1o the en: with | knowledge he Kitty her, t her and grac Ove pa and & to cob lingerie. mart with S Dot surprising that I of personalit rried to the not compensate Fay for {end of the story sages that tof furnitu inet, i dependenthe Here is a group proves beyond t furnitu ady 1o dan; Men were wild | her; she could pick and choose pavind I young widow. o the author of the story alluring than o Her urance, her little 5 were irresistible 10 Kitty Carlyle was always uys different: she always he right thing in just the r and self inated with her. She dcertain of Kitty's was { memoriz i cleverest remarks, storing them away subconscious| she w for future Kitty she + widow! serjous ubeut this to her that to af s f only—if She wi 1t did not n widowhood L hus who | to her. i the book, Kitty former wmar- | When | o | did not of Kitty's widowhood 1y ut a fortunate occurrence, u | L course in h to attain | ¢ for some two yeur bring followed the adventu and finished the regret ver Kitty w hapy n of her v the ily did 1 sigh o that to be wanted her out wan| he fasci men to to make | e wanted all of Kitty s, all her piquant ck r and over again she r i of what Kitty wiys there was some re ebby stockiy ne Then there was mention little frocks made quite simply an unmistakable somethir them that made dif o to ice in the wor (e BEDTIME STORIES ready for W “Any one who does plied White foot. 17 "I don't,” said Peter Whitefoot chuckled. Buster Bear | foolish,” said he. what Th the | 1t T dian't k h | the Winter. " s I don’t ren Winter fo e |11 do.” retorted ntinued in Tomorrow BY THORNTON W. BURGESS for Winter. Dc ter, Whitef. t is foolish,” re you get ready 1 | | | “Then you're 1 won't take back | I said.” ! ough | «| Rice cooks light +2 and £l / itefoot ) you get ready red Peter. the sarr tl: nd the rest of the Squir Whitefoot er don't slecp t 3 1 it's Hot Enough For Iron- ing in 32 Minutes! 1p nuts and acorn Wood disappeared in th, i thing tered ste “Where are the; e up seeds.” dy knows but Wi Mouse,” replied Wh Black Sh: seems as If ev to get ready Peter. I Meadow Mouse does?” Let over morning drain and the te right, 197 Salt Mackerel in Milk. el lie flesh cold water James B. Lambie Co., Inc. 13 New York W o mack side night in r in a Ave. pan where it will Cover to the depth of one-fourth inch | simmer ver | stove or in the ov utes. Toe with fresh sweet milk sently on the bsc n for about 20 min Serve with plain or baked po What other drink costs so little? YOU get fifty delicious cups of Chase & Sanborn's Seal Brand Coffee out of every pound. Divide the cost per pound by 50 and realize how econom- ical Seal Brand is per cup! That’s the way to judge coffee value. You can buy Seal Brand Coffee anywhere in the U. S. A. You'll like its uniform quality and flavor. Trade supplied by Chase & Sanborn 200 High Street, Boston, Mass. Chase&Sanbom’s SEAL BRAND COFFEE

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