New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 20, 1925, Page 13

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y - NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1925, » ' « 18 2 JUDGHENT OF $27,000 | SICK WOMEN | AT YOUR LIBRARY ..uis. 33°5%. oo | The Superfine Qualities None 1s fs o> il s A I "R — ™) e [loved than Charies Lamib, or A i INROSENBERGSUT| OF MDDLE AGE. - o o 5 i , '"'! "l ll | “high and far oft times” when you l""l""\ I“l [Vasd il L u"“”]:"m" )| " " i yavy -y Ly 8 4 the relatlons of life, This play | ‘ ‘ A | ] { T JN CnBeCamodComfomHyOm read falry storles you used to plan | piquingly combines the sallent points | ‘0 Hlfl ' " I f (Continued from First Page) mwfid’dhl"dhl what your wishes would be if a|of lamb's life with the drumatic | - e '\l,‘"l "VI LT [TTLTLTT 1] Pinkham's Vi ble C J | falry sodutother whould just happon | fanclen that interpret the real man '/, s T e 4 ANV L. FEE TR T 00:. for her husband's hotel, egetal . po to como that way., Of course, at | as the author sces and loves him, ‘ N e s el ‘ot G207 S -e:lhd.lw'nlx‘:.;’ g h":“"fl and the as- «=Note Mrs. Headden’s Case | irst it wius tunny ehitdish things you | ; o 1ng | - ok l;" :;ll ° |:nl-rufflu..o.flui) M Go:r_xl&_'—‘_ ""I"" wanted Jike all the whipped cream | CONQUEST OF FEAR by Basll rchase price of the hotel, acon, = ** Dur ou could eat nnd a W) to slide on King g ialess otherwise (ndicated, theatrien) notioss and ceviews W0 this colums are | (The eptate wam set Change of Life I suffered with my | LA Y R IGY o b written by tho press agencles tor the reapect ‘o amusement, company. 1922 tt‘lm sons dI':c:rlv.:rc‘: llhnnl!u.lhgll: . whole_right 'My" ‘1":‘ ““m‘v‘l :“l |W1”w ‘\"h;‘v;\“y il “‘w\‘:‘[‘f“ DEREAN T T E LA Rl {1t you slide back, And then you alsh § | sepuatior A4 Shtelssd the optisa et g '} | Weoted to b poodlooking and popu- |1t you far for sour beaith, it you @re revealed in every steaming cup. re. roug! . | lar 4 otic, d —Wa are wi 0 Y vour . un;wx!m LAWS” AT PA{;GACE. fying as entertaining and much cgm- | their attorneys Tanner and Garvin, :::, ';nh&%.‘b::g :T,XM T,.”: ,‘::,’,‘: E,h{|.”,',“|::.,,g:‘,:w \\\..J\" )IJLH":((T:Hln‘-lrltf;":qulyl‘:pg;xt:’un’tx ;inv-“' JUST TRY IT. “Broken Laws,” the splendld pho- | edy 15 evoked by this clever “fict; | they brought clvil action to recover i ¢ ¢ oA B Yy i et i toplay presented by Mre. Wallace | Gray and Bell offer “1926 Song Rip-|the additional $20,000 of which e-:ild ngtrget.:p ‘::-Tfr mw:'l l,\...In_ m.\'.l; {nl-xcmln‘h_.lr.:;.-‘.l.,f ?3'.‘;.,-'! ixil'L.f"iL‘nli"!.;Zf,i ;‘:‘;‘uw}nr BLEND of INDIA, CEYLON and JAVA TEAS Reld, now running at the Palace|ples)’ Thelr songs and playing are |they sald they had been deprived. :voudl‘i{tme’ A!': e e ";l'“‘m”f;‘ f“,' P ¢ | R theater, boasts &’ cast that contains not only the best talent in Movieland but many who are noted in humani- larlan work as well, The vaudeville blll has four very fine acts with George and Ivy Wheeler in an excellent musical nov- olty; Lomax and Blue, colored sing- ers and dancers; Oliver and Stan- ton, splendid character actors, and the Ballyhoo Trio in a great novel- ty -oftering in which they are alded by the entire vaudeville show, On ‘Thursday “In Every Woman's Life" will be offered with four acts, and heginning Bunday night Cécll B. DeMille's “The Golden Bed” will start a foursday run. “ARGENTINES"” AT CAPITOL. The present bill of Keith vaude- ville at the Capitol now playing is headed by Sulkin's Argentines, an aggregation of clever musicians pre- senting a8 fine a jazz orchestra as ever seen or heard around these parts, Other acts include Galett! and Kokin in “Comedy Novelty Sur- priees,” and a surprise worth while really offered in presentation of the ineing mounkey.Jeannette and Harry Shield were well llked with their clever dance offering, the kicking of the young woman heing of a sensa- tfonal nature; Lang and Volk offer a comedy offering that is as mysti- | LYCEUM TONIGIT AND WEDNESDAY Priscilla Dean N (Ne— ‘Siren of Seville’ HER GREATEST PICIURE ey s s | THURS, — FRL. — AT 'K—THE UNKNOWN THE GREATESI MYSTERY DRAMA YET REDUCED PRICES MAT.—15¢, 20c. EVE.—15c, 25¢, 30¢ {LADIES' SPECIAL MATINER This Coupon and 10c Will Admit Any Lady to Best Seats CAPITOL TONIGHT AND WEDNESDAY KEITH VAUDEVILLE Featuring SULKINS ARGENTINES 10 — GREAT MUSICIANS — 10 GALETTI & KOKIN OTHER BIG ACTS Blanche Sweet Bessie Love Robert Agnew “'fimse Who Who Dance” MID-WINTER CARNIVAL 14 — KEITH ACTS — 14 NO ADVANCE IN PRICES 2 WON r OF THE FARM, FACTORY AND STORE At the Big CONNECTICUT . State Armory, Hariford real good, The photoplay features with this bill offers Blanche Sweet and Robert Agnew in "“Those Who Dance,” & dramatic offering with a punchy plot. Beginning next Mon- day the management wiil stage a Mid-Winter Carnival, offering a big patrons in the form of fourteen acts of vaudeville and two excelient pho- toplays. The personnel of the vaude- ville will be announced within the next few days, and the photoplays will offer Willlam Kox's new offer- ing “It Is The Law" and Tom Mix in “Teeth."” PRISCILLA DEAN AT LYCEUM The gamest girl In pictures! That's what they call Priscilla Dean around the Thomas H. Ince studios when she was making “The Siren of Sevllle,” which is playing at the Lyceum today and tomorrow in con- nection with an all star picture pro- gram, including comedies and news reels, The bargain prices at matinces and evening performances continues in order at the box office. In “The Siren of Beville,” a dra- matic romance of sunny Spain, Miss Dean plays opposite Clare De Lorez, a new screen vamp, and since both |love the same man things happen. Starting Thursday the Lyceum changes the picture program with | another round in the Jack Dempsey “Fight and Win" serics, and also stars Virginia Valll, Percy Marmont, | Marguerite Fisher and others in “K, |the Unknown.” This 1s taken from | the mystery drama hy Mrs, Mary show, really a great big treat, to ita|g Yesterday's decislon made by Judge George B. Simpson, sitting iy Judge A. W. Frater's court, granted the two brothers judgment against the three executors in the sum of $20,000 with Interest from 1019, amounting in all to about 4,000, Thecourt held, in effect, that the executors had no right either direct- Iy or indircetly to purchase any of the property of the estate, It 1s the duty of exocutors and administrators to lay before the helrs all the facts regarding transactions involving the property, he held, “It is plainly shown,” he declared in his opinion, “that Mrs. Ella 8. | 1I:0lmllhl'l‘p,' made a very good buy | when she secured the property for | $140,000, At that time it was_pro- | ducing $1,200 a month and in No- | vember, 1923, it was producing $1,~ 800 a month, showing a substantial increase in value,” “It is evident from the testimony |that the books of the estate did not {show the transaction in which Mrs. Rascnberg was intercsted. The op- ion had not been put on record and | |there is nothing to show that the | plaintifts knew or had reason to be- lieve that the property had been bargained away by the Manhattan |Investment company. It was the |duty of Mrs. Rosenberg and the |other two defendants, at that time, to disclose to the plaintiffs all the transactions in which they were in- tercsted in regard to the sale of this property. Defendants have not maintained the burden imposed upon | terdoctoring with- out relief a man who was rooming with ustold my son thatLydiaE. Pink- | - ham’s Vegetable Compound cured his mother at the Changeof Life,s0 I began taking your After taking it for two weeks I could get out of my bed by | myself, I am now 58 years old and in better health and stronger than ever in my life, I have recommended the | Vegetable Compound to many suffer | ing women, young and old, and you | may use my name lnrywhere as long | as you please. I will be glad to an swer any letters sent to me.” ~ Mrs, F. B.'HEADDEN. 6 Holt Avenue, | Macon, Georgia. | Inarecent country-wide canvass of | Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- | pound, over 200,000 replies were re- | ceived and 98 outof every 100 reported they had been benefited by its use. For sale by druggists everywhere. e ——— man wko beat him to the home of a physiclan where he was arrested, The young man, when arrested on a charge of assault and battery, gave his name as Michael Corulli, | 19. He was discovered, according | to the police, by Marius Vassalios, | 13. in the act of ransacking the Vas- | salios apartment while the pare were away. Marius called his grand- father, Pericles Pana, 51, and the | latter is said to have attacked the | alleged burglar with his own tools and to have completely worsted him. Corulli is saild to have fled from | start Vasays on Modern Dramalists You | plays anvway. of a New York paper? mich fun to be able to sce every play with just the right touch of the | casual and hored in your manner, | But did you ever realize how close | you can como to fust that thrill by | roading plays? Of courso you don't oo tho crowds and hear the or- | cheatra but you alss don't miss hours of | ty sleep and merelful of a!l you can loav: you'ro hored! 1f you want to disedVer how many plays you heve been achimg to vead, DARK HOURS by Don Marquis. Drama of penetrating beauty based on the hetrayal, the trial umli Calvary in the life of Jesus of Nau- | areth, P GASOLINE AUTOMOBILE by Hobbs, Elllott and Consoliver. | A new completely rewrltten edi- | tlon of the standard textbook on | automobile construction and opera- | tion. Valuable for the clearness of | its explanations; the thorough 'dis- | cusslon of the electrical equipment | of the automobile and the numerous wring diagrams, . by Willlam Lyon Phelps.s won't get very far in it unless are too incapacttated to s straight out for the plays he is ta jng about. He writes about Barrie | and Shaw and Galsworthy and Fiteh | and Mautorlinck and Rostand until one fesls that the summum bonum n life would be to read everything | they eves wiote! | Of coure: you won't do it but you | may firmly resolve to read some In which case let us suggest that you begin with a col- | lection like Shay's Contemporary by Isabel Lewls. One Act Plays 1921 (American).| A popular discussion of the phe- These are light, and amusing sea-|nomena of eclipses with particular soned with bits of real pathos and | bearing on the total eclipse of "the | are all short. Similar collections | sun on January 24 which will pass | are Ten Minute Plays by Pierre Lov- | over midwestern and eastern states | ing and Contemporary One Act!and is the first total eclipsein New | Plays by Lewis, also One Act Plays | York and New England since 1806. | by Cohen. “ e ow | ¥ifty Contemporary One Act Plays {A NINETEENTH CENTU R ¥| by 8hay and Loving and Representa- | CHILDHOOD by Mary Mac- tive One Act Plays of Continental | Carthy, Authors by Moses will give you an| In this book, Mrs, MacCarthy 1s .. GREAT PREACHERS AS SE BY A JOURNALIST by William Shepherd, A series of delightfully frank in- terviews with famous preachers showing them just as they are in private life, Some of those included are Harry Emerson Fosdick, Bishop | McConnell and Russell Conwell. s HANDBOOK OF SOLAR SCLIPSES | Roberts Rinehart. Next Monday “The Circle,” will be shown, {them by the rule in that case. There- fore, the plaintiffs are entitied to judgment against the defendants, and each of them, in e sum of $20,000 with interest at the rate of 6 per cent from June 19, 1919." Marriage the Vassalios apartment, but he was | Idea of the kind of = thing foreign traced to a doctor's office several | dramatists are doing without being blocks away by the boy, quite as hard reading as some of —_—— thelr longer and more intense CITY COURT ASSIGNM S | dramas. If you want to know what the, Cases were asslgned as follows by | Boy, 13, Tracks Man PALACE Tonight and Wed. New York, Jan, 20.—~After he had been beaten over the head with his own jimmy, 'an alleged burglar es- caped last night, only to he tracked Wanted for Burglary | Vi 2 ince 3 W. A Aty court | Very best in drama has been since }.;":adtigd;y Weaihetishabiecs | the days of Greek tragedy do Chief Adam Vincent vs. Wildam Al. | European Dramatista by Matthews | brecht, January 22 at 2 p. m. Woods 1t contains 21 | from cover to cover. | for plaintiff, Greenstein and Day, plays, all of them ones you should | Berry and Reynolds for defendant. |known and have probably been dodg- | Maria Ollva vs. Connecticut Com- | ing all your life because you don't pany, January 23 at 2:30 p. m. Ca- by the 13 year old grandson of the THE GREATEST PHOTO- PLAY THAT WE HAVE PRESENTED ON OUR SCREEN IN THE LAST 5 CORNS Lift Off-No Pain! This VAUDEVILLE Docen't hurt one bit! Drop a litfle “I'reezone’” on an aching corn, in- tantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly you life it right off with 4 — Wonderful Acts — 4 fingers. | Your druggist sells a tiny bottle PARSONS’| B of “Freezone” for a few cents, suf- | ficient to remove every hard corn, | soft corn, or corn betwcen the toes, | and the foot calluses, without sore- ness or irrltation, Hartford THURS. — FRI. — SAT. Jan. 22, 23, 24 Eve. 50c, $2.50, Mat. 50c, $2.00 %fi‘é&m Hand it LITTLE Taes Musicol rsatron . 4 - .',,h%%%m e = *7he JAMES Boys' £ A PAUL WHITEMAN BANDY DERS THE DRESS GOODS SHOP 400 MAIN ST. FOR WEDNESDAY Pure Wool Dress FLANNEL Wed. $1 . 39 Yard Pure Silk Japanese PONGEE Wed. .. 75 c Yard Silk Striped SHIRTING Wed. .. 35c Yard 72x90 PEQUOT SHEETS Wed. $1'35 ach 0-in. Heavy Qliality CREPE DE CHINE Wed. $1 ’29 Yard 17 v 24 4 JANUARY no-oooos. oo OVER 200 EXHIBITS 36_inch Occupying 50,000 Square Fect of floor space, Depicting Connecticut’s o Ny gy A Progress in AGRICULTURE, INDUSTRY, COMMERCE. “ UOL ELR(’I‘A s CONCERTS and HIGH - CLAS ENTERTAINMENTS DAILY. | \‘ed Yal'd { FREE SAMPLES OF MERCHANDISE — FREE SOUVENIRS. o 75c ADMISSION 385 CENTS } » gl | know how much you will like them! tale for @aintit, Day, Berry and |Then read Longer Plays by Cohen Reynolds ~ for defendant. Angelo | and ‘Chiet Contemporary Dramatists Tomasso ve, Joe LaRocco, January | sometimes a little wistful and some- | timeg. a little ironic as she rum- mages through a treasure chest of | memories of a last century girlhood gpent mostly in Eton and in Lon- | don. Through her eves we get | glimpses of Henry James, Maurice | Baring, and Samuel Butler and as| teach eplsode is told we have that | delicious feeling of reading a per- | fect book. . . SAFEGUARDING CHILDRE NERVES, a handbook of mental health by Walsh and Foote. How can I make my child eat?| | Why doesn't my boy behave? My | . i by Dickinson. The latter contains | 1 26 at 2:30 p. m. Casale for plain- | 8 Ltift, Mag for defendant, Carmelo |8lan things which you will ltke tre- | Fazzina vs. Louls Landau, et al, Jan- ‘""‘:(‘lo\wt'y tzgg;ilan‘;‘ep” uary 28 at 10 a. m. Casale for plain- | ¢OT4InE 10 ;:“,‘fxy(;;mb”rg and LeWitt f,‘?. do-| Dukes Modern Dramatists :i‘\'»a fendant. John Ishoo vs. Joseph | brief casays on the chief dramatists Jackman, January 38 at 2 p. m, Ca- | Of each country so you will know a wale for plaintiff, Klett for defend- liftle better where to begin on in- ant, Michacl Sliluzio vs. Alexander | Jividusl plays. il Chilicki, January 29 At 10 g, m. Ca- | tell Y ourselves but if we started Tsale for A, Traceskl for de. |to talk about the haunting Celtic sale for plain ) fendant. Louls Raphael va. Jullus | beauty of Synge or the fanciful Hartman, January 2% at 10 a. m, | genlus of Barrie or SBhaw's im- | Nalr and Nair for plaintiff, Mangan | mensely _ stimuloging fashion . of for defendant. Miner, Tead and |ST Jlustonspor LUHi SHAOP0T | Tullock vs. Charles P. Leonard, et |Galsworthy, we never should 'be |a1, Janua 2 p. m. Nafr ana |done. aEnURLY 08at 2 [ 8o, since we know you Aare Nalr for plaintiff, Klett for defend- | t. Samson Baba vs. Peter Baba, | ginning to suspect us of being high- brow, we'll tell you we have such January 80 at 2 p. m. Mag for| ? : piaintiq, KTt for defendant. Geargo [Dice books on the movics. Fhores P. Ditbus va. Joseph Yuska, January |O€ on Screen Acting: Its Require- | 0 at 8 p. m. Woods for plaintift, [ments and its Rewards which 1s = SRR ; 3 * | written by a committee of prom- Klatt for defendant. A .E. Bengston | T 5 R oA an et linent movie stars. Then there |; Saaid S S & | With the Movie Makers by Amic 30 p m. LeWitt for plaintlft Po) Do Sieils you how they do the| I". MeDonough for defendant, Frank Tob. | Stage sets and manage their makeup Ginsburg vs, Bennie Solomon, ¢ n:nry "w at 2 30“; m. ‘yi-;m for | @nd put on the hale raising stunts plalntiff, Hungerford and Saxo. tor|J¥ith %0 amall a casualty list. Tilin defendant Folk by Wagner also gives vou | slangy, amusing glimpses behind the scroen, Animated Cartoons by Lu | tells how those fascinating creations | originated and how they are made. | Scenario Writing Today by Lytton | will give you a few pointers vou're planning to make your mil- |ilons that way. Did you ever wonder what makes a play or a movie go? Of course the acting and the stage managing have an enormous amount to do with that. One has only to read David | Belasco's Theater Through the Sta Door to realize that, He gives | tascinating record of the trials, suc- 35¢ “Danderine” does Wonders a for Any Girl's Hair cesses, and unexpected finds of a | manager and the wiles he has to over. use to put a performance Frohman tells of similar experiences {in his Memoirs of a Manager. The actor's viewpoint is delight- fully express hern's Mel | choly Tale of * and in Berten's Real Sarah Rernhardt, Joseph Jef- | ferson also has a charming autobi- ography. | But of course ultimately it comes back to the playwright. Platt in his Practical Hints on Playwriting gives a brief non technical discussion espocially good on details of con- struction and stage business. Baker's | Dramatic Technique is a stimulating |analysis of the very ¢ of drama and the way construction, | eharacterization and alogue ean make a play profoun ing. | The old fashioned Iaster and Christmas “concert” whi such an event in § now being very largely replac pageants and simple dra tume and Scenery for Amateurs by Mackay fs exceedingly helpful in staging any kind of dramatic per-| g Gi Try this! When combing | formance. How to Produce Chil- {and sing your hair, just moisten | dren’s Plays by the same author is your hair-brush with a little “Dan- | also excellent. | derine” and brush it through your| The application to church work is | hair. The effect s startling! You | discussed in Candler’s Drama in Re-| can do your hair up immediately and |liglous Service and Miller's Church it will appear twice as thick and | Pageantry, Religious Dramas 1924, | heavy—a mass of gleamy hair, | Six Bible Plays by Hobbs and Dram- | sparkling with life and possessing | atized Bible Storics by Russell “fur- | that incomparable softness, sh- ' nish dignified and beautiful plays. | | nesss and luxuriance. A missionary program may also While beautifying the hair “Dan- be enlivened by using Russell's derine” is also toning and stimulating | Dramatized Missionary Stories each single hair to grow thick, long | Simon's Dramatization tells how and strong. Hair stops falling out|to dramatize such stories as Silas| and dandruft disappears. Get a bot- | Marner and Treasure Island for | tle of “Danderine” at any drug or school work. Mackay's Patriotic tollet counter and just sce how!Flays and Pageants and the Atlan- healthy and youthful your hair ap- |tic Book of Junior Piays arc also pears after this delightful, refresh-!ccllent sources for amateur ing dreseing. | matics, | some rather grim and realistic Rus- | violently ac-! We should like to | | vim, eat with little girl wakes up screaming at| Inight. Why? How can I provent | “Nervousness"? These are some of | the questions answered in this sensi- | [Ble and understandable hook on | problems of behavior in childhood. i | o« SCIENCE AND LIFE by Robert A Millik To those who claim that modern science Tas discredited religion, | there could scarcely bp a more ef- fective answer than this plea for the | ! supremacy of the tual coming fromr one who won the Nobel prize for 1923 in recognition of his| achievement in isolating the elec- | tron. j Sheie | SKIING FOR BEGIN) by Arnold Lunn. | Adequate and economical equip- | ment, aift the art of running and the 1t turns and jumps are clear- | cribed in this excellent little for the novice, ¢ ! book . | |THE WAY OUT, by Edward A.| FILENI A business forecast Boston's eat morchant who discusses such | topics as Counterfeit wages, voth and claw competition, War on waste, ordizing Amertea. Stomach Remedy | A Fast Seller DARE'S MENTHA PEPSIN x Thousand Bottles Sold in One New Jersey Town Last Year — Axelrod’s Pharmacy Declares Money Back If One Bottle Doesn't Make Any Stomach Sufferer Rejoice. combine with other corrective stomach agents so that it will do t} most good in the shortest possible time. Why hother with elow actors whe one dessertspoonful of this e and pleasant liquid reme gas, Dbloating, heavi the stomagh to speedily And why should an an suffer another hov wom- liges- with in mis when e remedy that ac y can be easily pr But there is more to eay remarkable remedy—someth will interest thousands of despondent 1 people. Dare's Mentha e quickly reljeves stomach dis it also conquers stubbo; Ayspepsia and gastritis, and puts an end to dlzziness, nervousness, head- ache, sleeplessness and despondency which distressing troub! near- 1y alway: ised by chronic stom- ach disturbanc Dare's Mentha Pepsin is pleasant to take, has a delightfully reireshing ste and after it has put your | stomach in a clean hy cona dition, just noti you look and feel, recting stomach dis: premely good remedy xelrod's Pharmacy and dru vwhere guarantee, is a f bullds you up makes you work with 4 slecp sound- | 7. ! MOTHER :— Fletcher's Cas~ toria is a pleasant, harmless Substitute for Castor Oil, Pare- goric, Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups, especially prepared for Infants in arms and Children all ages. To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of Proven directions on each package. Physicians everywhere recommend it. fullest freedom That’s why we ask you to permit us to demonstrate an “EASY” in pour home without obligation on your part. Then you can convince yourself that the " BASY™ principle of washing clothes by means of air and suction is as efficient on heavy blankets as it is safe for washing the fimest The revolving vacunm cups move up and down sixty times per minute. They flush the soapy water through the mesh of the gar- ments. There is no dragging, jecking or pull- ing of the clothes—no wear or tear—simply a gentle forcing of the water the mesh of the fabrics, carrying with it all dirt and BARRY & BAMFORTH 19 Main St. Tel. 2504 GIRLS! 1 that the condition of {ave you ever stopped to thi your teeth often means the diflerence between being popular and unpo { the front teeth are unclean or decayed, the appear- ance is repulsive. f the back teeth are decayed, it gives one an offen- sive breath. f teeth are 1 , it ca and malkes one appear old. Yerhaps the fear of pain keeps you from having your teeth attended to. You need not fear that now, for Dr. Keith, the new up-to-date dentist, will do your work abso- lutely without pain. Or perhaps it is the cost of good denti that causes you to dels also can be overcome because Dr. Keith is mak- ing a proposition whereby you can make a small payment when your work is started and pay a little each week—as much as you can comfortably afford, and before you realize it your work will be all done and paid for without inconvenience to yourself. Why not start in right now, before further decay causes the 1 of teeth, and consequently larger expense in the future? Dr. William F. Keith ses the checks to fall in, SLY a ~%EEn.. 338 Main Street 3 For OuickvResults Use Herald Classified Ads

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