The evening world. Newspaper, November 27, 1902, Page 6

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THE WORLD: THURSDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 27, 1902. 5 ‘ 4 s4200320906000800000020000000 $9000080000000G08860O08 0060006000 ‘ VIRTUOUS ATROCITIES. é EAT dadeials heave «tendeony to) what eolentiste calt| | The Life of the President’s Thanksgiving Turkey. atavism, to what breeders call ‘throwing back’—to re- vert to the more imperfect types of their primitive an As Seen by Artist Powers. | cestors, Man shares this tendency with his fellow ani- ', mals, He is at present (in the oldest, earllest-settled _' and most conservative of our communities, in New York! Rane Do! and Massachusetts) “throwing back" from his enlight-| (IT B-Gosw ened state of civilization to a surprisingly benighted fe oe b Park Row, New York, Entered at tho Post-OMce ee at New York as Gecond-Class Mall Matter. Lot METRO Ciietestssirtiieet NOv18)/078, Letters, Queries, Answers Many Questions on All Sorts of Subjects Answered for Evening World Readers by Experts. Names Wanted for Twins. [out of the store. So you see the shoe To the Faitor of The Evening World: pinched. As customers are often poor Wanted—Names for girl twins. They |}eople it Is a shame to defraud them in were raised on Staten Island and arej this way, DAVID NELSON. mosquito proof. No ferry boat names,| 342 West Twenty-second street. please. Carrie Nation and Mary Mac-| Apply at Commandant’s OMice, Navy, Lane not considered. A prize of two building lots in ‘the very centre of Rari- tan Bay for the names most expressive and descriptive of the “‘chesty? daddy's feelings. TOMMY MACK. CROOSING THE EGY x GR CONGRATULATI You; (8 THE BABY Doing WELL? state of savagery. He has been recently engaged in dragging a fellow man violently from his home, stripping him naked, coat- ing him with tar and feathers and carrying him about astride a fence rail. He has been trying to duplicate this performance on an old man sixty-nine years of age, ODE POOOT9GF-99640090090000O Yard. To the Editor of The Evening World: Where can I get a pass to visit the Brooklyn Navy Yard? Odd 3O6 and when that old man resisted him he has shot and 4 ‘West New Brighton, 9. I. | uM pete Amityville, L. I. Killed him. Not content with this he has dragged a 3 5 miateeric dauierelic hae ‘oe to Rug Beating. ‘women from her home, stripped her naked and beaten g ¢ Editor of The Evening World: Let me give a little advice to those| | beating, &c., out of windows, A mere who feed peanuts to Central Park equir-|4 notable cause for consumption and rels. If you will crack the peanut before /other contagious diseases there never giving it to them they will usually eat) was. The Board of Health should be: It, instead of burying it, as they so often | made to take it up and fine the parties dg. I don't know why, but they will. | heavily that do It. This fs pleasanter for children to watch TRAINED NURSD. than ts the burying. Color Mixing. PARK BONCHER. | +, tne raitor of The Evening World: v i Holidays Too Few; Work Too Long Please send to me a description of how To the Editor of The Evening World: 1to get different colors by mixing two. ie this country our holidays are too; colors together. GEORGE OLSEN. ; To the TAltor of The Evening World: AM glad to see something about sug ¢ her im the face. He has arrogated to himself these bar- | tarous punitive powers not because his victims harmed him, mot decause their supposed offense had anything to Go with him, but merely because he suspected them of having disregaried certain moral conventions of which he himself approved—merely because to persecute has always been one of the prerogatives of virtue, Having tarred and feathered a man, stripped naked * amt beaten a women and killed an old man because they did not live their lives according to his ethical pregjedines, this remarkable reversion to the stone ago Mifts ap his voice in horrified lamentings because another stavistic human animal in a less settled and less civil- ised commrenity further south has lynched negroes for committing the worst offense that one human being can 903o i @ Z 2 3 4 few and our work fs too long. We! There are three primary colors—red, have not nearly as many holidays as) blue and yellow. All other colors are do other nations, and numbers of people | obtained by mixing these. For instance, must work even on holidays (as conduc-| red and blue make purple; red and yel tors, &c.). Also we work, most of us, | low make purple; blue, yellow and red over elght hours a day. This doesn't] Make brown; blue and yellow make seem square, nor is it good for the} Breen, &. infifet on another. In both these cases equally the law has alth, King Alfred, who was wise,| Apply to E. P. Bryan, General Mane ‘ broken. In the South ne-|% aid man should divide the twenty-four ager of Interh % peen:Gegeantiy ignored and * hours as follows: Elght hours for sleep, pea LE toed deca / LAMPS OM Transit Company. ggroes have been lawlessly killed for the commission of a ; THe PRESIDENTS terrible crime. In the North an old man has been law- eight hours for work and eight hours L To the Editor of ‘The tavening World: for recreation. We would all be better 1 lt-weidiaiaa: CLERK. Where can we file an application as TAKING THE FAS lesely killed and a weak woman shamed for the sus- AT RUTINEE(S Ar Hapldl transit Mishel conde . i rotors? peoted commission of n misdemeanor. BARN Varo Autre The WHITE House Rames of French Soldiers. G. LESTER and L. MARKS. 3 HE SENDS His CARO To the Editor of The Evening World: 4 The Southern lynchings are horrible enough to a} ¢ WAIL sew) “Td “ME COOK IE EMANGOLNSSRNY A: Gra Or her) w6le It Means “Please Reply.” civilised human being. But oven more shocking are the $ Miers who enlisted in her army about] TM Pittor of The Brentag World: sanotimomious Northern atrocities which meddling and | % fifty or sixty years ago, how can I find} seen ae Sour eaaine Cvintisune ti cal intolerance has recently been trating. | out a certain soldier's name who en- . i hypooriti y Dermerenne: | s “T was selocted from two dozen famous eggs by my master, Mr, Horace “They wrapped me up in blankets so that I shouldn't catch cold and Heteai tent) he Stata ot| “RS. V. Pu" atands tor the ‘Grevch 3 . i : ou might write to the Minister o _ , ” THE ACCIDENTS OF FORTUNE. z Vous, at Westerly, R. I. They marked me with a cross as the ‘Turk of fed me with all kinds of improved wheats, corns and cereals, with pebble WantatiBaristoraepivafanibarteninoans eae Repondez s'll_ vous plait, It is in the Ittlo things af life that Fortune wields her| ns sauce to sharpen my appetite. It was surprising to see how fast I gained of Information to the French Consulate | “"!°? means “please reply. strongest influence —Jullus Caosar, destined himselt to lone| > “My mother gat on mo for three weeks, until one day I pecked my way welght. . at No, a South William street. ‘To Death or Antor! thls Hfe Because he did not rise in the Senate house to honor é through the shell with as much strenuosity as Teddy showed at San YOne day master eaid it was time I went to call on the President. 1 Looking for Sultan of New Jersey. ee Rienas ‘The ieee Worl BS a rival, Juan Hill. sent up my card to the cook and the President said he had never geen a To the Faltor of The Mrealng World: Oe ute croee sent ore CraO Rey : ® put a stop to talk 5 pmaade” eee nee anhowers leecipenie oun tuce sul : “Mother was very pleased; father was so proud. They were congrat- finer bird in his Hfe. uieave ote Fae Fe Genero Ee | thong pooh doeai Meal etiey dem thes ln : > " “ ” nees to "The United States and New H Hearn rce ate apropon of Krupp's chance venture | ¢___wated by all tho nelgiibors, who sald T was the tmage of my father. « My Inst recollection was of chestnuts. Jersey." It looks to me as if New Jer-|dogs, which't wouldn't raet vite in making an exhibit of his steel and his new gun at the | « DOMESTIC BLI88, AN EXPERT. ACQUIRED WISDOM. INSINUATING. alte aa ‘the eae ny athe United I had to fight for my I!fe or move to Crystal Palace Exhibition in 1851. He went to the ex- Wi %| States and Jersey." Will some kind Astoria, wen , es A.B. position a het without honor in his own land and| % 4 Af @ reader please tei me what kind of bates ccd * Pith fortune made. If he had stayed at| ? Wid & country New Jeteey is, and If they have | T® the Eattor ot The Evening World: return’ ith his ie made. 4 lf atkligior Sultan there? TIRELY too much tmportance ts + home would the little workshop have expanded into the | > = > JACK RABBITT. given to the man of muscle. Mus- enormous plant at Hessen with {ts 40,000 workmen? ra © | oleott Was Born at Providence, R. cles are all right in thelr place, Socially they are out of place if too much in evidence. Tho dest place for muscular exertion is in the labor field., ‘There it produces value, which goes to: the general welfare of society. The football craze is a freaft of mod- ern intemperance and should be regu- lated as are prize fights. HARRY PALMIERI. Wm, H. Moody, Secretary of Navy. A Conl Peddler Testifies. To the Bdltor of The Evening World: To the Editor of The Evening World: What Is the name of the Secretary of 1am a peddler of coal and am scarcely| the Nav JAMES SWEENEY. able to make a living at tt. The cheap- Wellington at Waterloo, est coal that I have bought sinco the| rene eaitor of The Evening World: ip | strike cost me $ a ton. In somo cases I] iq Napoteon Bonaparte defeat Wele The year 1851, by a curious coincidence, is the year | { hen Edward Clark advanced to the struggling young | ¢ inventor Singer the sum of $700. That sum had multl-| # to $7,000,000 before Clark’s death; out of a part of | it-was built the beautiful mansion on Riverside Drive which is now the home of Bishop Potter and his bride. Why ‘was Clark moved to let the poor sewing machine inventor have the money that other men of means had refused him? What would have happened in later life To ‘Thomas Lipton, if whilo he was a car driver in New Orleans a committee of strikers had not persuaded G | To the BAitor of The Evening World: | Where was Chauncey Olcott born? cA. Edna May Played It. To the Editor of The Evening World: Who played the original role of the Salvation Army lassie in the ‘Belle of New York" in New York Clty? SADIE HAAS. _ him to throw up his job? Would he have lived to be- Tenspot—You should have seen the pair f= . ®| have patd as much as $9.50. This would] |ington, the English commander, be ~come a traction magnate? & Harker held inst night Applicant-(Diq you advertise for @ T didn't ring your fare up yet," sald @ | give me a profit of five cents on a 100| fore ald came from Blucher, the Gere af ; © Teay—I thought he had given up poker $ man that waa good at figures? Johnny Peck—What's a bachelor, pa?’ } the conductor, holding out his hand. Sl pound bag, and for this five cent ail wen inal ¢ Waterloo, Bel- To the first John Jacob Astor, if his father, the butcher since his marriage. Morchant—Yes; are you a bookkeeper? Mr, Peck—A bachelor, my son, is @ “Oh, that's all right," whispered the lar (or $100 a ton) I have to Keep alana og af, GROSS. - @f Waldorf, had had the money necessary to appren- Tenspot—He has, He was holding his Appicant—No; but I used to select man who refuses to swap his happiness Lrehalle ig eet tat dart eee hors and wagon and deliver to any O toak historians agree that the tide of tice the’ Jad to a carpenter, as he desired? All that twins oe sera cusebeees AOS ice for a burlesque Beh for @ gold brick. TI won't tell the company.” “| flocr. Peddigra should buy coal from] yjctory had set in Napoleon's favor be- i. Eitiabeded\was 900, Should we havo hada Waldorf- « PHDHE DOOHMAGOOHLDOHOHS DHHS PPPBHHOOHHIHD $4.9OOOOO HO HOOO. DDOL DDD DDT DOGHDOS-DSEDOHOOSHOS | seventy-five centa to $l cheaper than|yore the arrival of Blucher. So much private individuals, but some yards are Astoria it the strong box of the humble German Ce el a seine IRR family had contained that ? ° ci . a Carnecie, if he had not decided that he would ratner|| IMme. Judice Helps Home Dressmakers. kK Few Remarks. Wentssigations > a _ bea telegraph messenger boy than a cotton factory To the Editor of The Evening World: so that Wellington is credited with ex- claiming, in fear of possible defeat: “Oh, for night or Blucher!" He Ins AJrendy an American Citizen To the Fultor of The Evening Worl M i “ITH Thanksgt : i fr tempor- bobbin boy? | with=goods of the same shade or some |usually ‘the simple blouse pattern and ostly on Topics of the Day. ing 15 Be ete oer ince Te leat Rahoapeiatelen eter pene the numerous proprietors of modern department Mme, Judice, who Is connected joiner soloers do not EID I mul be | glove-Atting ctroular flounce skirt to] What show would the engle have against the turkey to-day year, with coal at higher rates and aid @ child ts born to them, and the {Satores it young Boucicaut behind the Paris counter|| with one of the leading dress J ain ses nuttons of a shaded drown | patterns, ‘The trlmsing te wereagea, in| 0 & Ponuar vote for national bind? with work no easier to get, the time|oniid returns to America with his “bad |] making establishments of this at : must surely be at hand when a change] parents and fs reared in America, 1» tt not resolved to marry the gir) at the other coun: P) that gre beautiful and would match the| a ananner to change the appearance, or} frere's giving thanks that the Thankegiving dinner costs | °f Some sort must set In. When burdens] necessary when tho child becomes of /}2 ter and set up shopkeoping with her dowry? city, has been secured by The}! goods. 1 just mention this so you will| tucks end shirrings made to @t the pat- rt only 15 per cent. y She little accidents of Fate! Pascal enld that if Cleo-|{ Evening World, and will con ||/know what T have. NEULI. | terns and the lace trimmed in fanoy |” » OF Cont more than last year! Rauitog Nenvy/ arpliret on ancue nie them. Give the consumer an arbitra- age to take out naturalization papers or 1s he an American citizen already? | Dunellen, N. J. designs. hy tiny 1 eh y duct this department, In which It seems the traditionally tiny H: it tion commission as well as the mii R, E. W. nose had been a trifle longer the character of the | 1 think y n easily match your 7 ly tiny Harlem flat ten't too small | tion bpp gsloipegtitsth c home dressmakers will be given || aeck teow troctuloth aa tt ie not wn | 4 WINTER WAIST, to accommodate a burglar or two. BROOME STRPET. | ugmith’s Has Moved” Is Correct. would have been changed. And if the thunder- To the Editor of The Svening World: we “Mo? Is Pronounced (Mine. A friend of mine claims that the sign helpful advice. Questions relat-}| unusual shade or quality. It would be| Dear Mme. Judice: y p' or qi iy ‘apa—Well, Johnnie, what are you most thankful for this storm had not driven Luther from the law to the church, ing to dressmaking will be an- || my advice to try and make {t over with I wish your advice about leoting | Pi 7 ° To the Editor of The Evening Worl At should we have had the Reformation? same material if posathle as the cheapest | £048 for a waist for winter and early | Thanksgiving? Is ‘Me (as In “MeHIro; ro-] “Smith's have moved” 1s the correct swered by Mme. Judice, | posathe as the cheapest soning, and a stylish way in which I{ Johnny (who alwnys gets last help)—That the turkey ain't|natneed "Mick" or is It peorouncea| way to describe the removal of Smith’ A THANKSGIVING DINNER | can have it made. I am a young girl,|®0t a8 long a neck as the ostrich, alr. "Mac?" 8. D.F.H. |store. I say {t 1s wrong. ‘remit ¥; ° Dloude, 6 feet 5 inches tall, quite stout. an a tes possession; therefore the subject : Dear Mme, Judice: | enotes posse: | subject | "The heroes who first trod on your shores fed on| 7 HAVE thoce and a halt yards of black | T also have a darksbrown silk skirt Teal ta Ane turkey (6-day: Has given place Pree aires a Soa No. 67/ cr the aontence is iugderston®) tore.” a 18,” ., | Chantilly lace flouncing sixteen with a white figure, which I would like ople don eel gratitude enough. af The subject belag Singular, 1 eee mses. eal Bemsel Adams In ao address) | tr ohos wide, 1thought of getting ee] to wear. Would it be appropriate at| 1 fact, tho dreary man who lives in boarding-houses says | To the Editor of The Evening World must be also singular, as ‘has moved’ to the Pilgrim Society, and so the Thanksgiving dinner | ..or tace to match Siceves, as there the present time? H, B., @yosset, L. I. It's hard to tell which of the two's more tough. Whero ts there a free lending Mbrary)ingtead of ‘have moved.” Kindly de~ may properly begin with little necks. But as for the| is not enough. 1 am wearing black and Several very pretty designs have ap- in Brooklyn? A.L, YOUNG. | cide the argument. LIONEL 6. If Chamberlain clothes his Inner man with all the three When to Wear @ High Hat, Jan, 12, 1886, Fell on Tuesday hundred cases of wine that accompany him to South Africa ne . ‘To the Editor of The Evening World: To the Editor of The Evening Worl: ho'l ce whole lot of things there that aren’t described in| What styles of euita may be worn with| What day of the week did Jan, 1%, any guide book, a atk hat? I notice some people on Fifth | 1886, fall on? J. Ay Or. Peared on thts page quite sulted to your type of build and for the occasion you desire it. Almost any of these made of crepe de Chin Nk or fancy woo] mi Feat of the bill of fare there has been a wide and a re-{thonent to cut Haas the ining yoke and not to line the sleeves. Plense te grettable departure from the elementary original whieh| mo some pretty way. 1am 6 feet 4 1-2; no adiition improves. There should be fish, for the! walst %; bust 99, I have a flat figure, eek waters of Plymouth Bay furnished it ig quantities; vent-|8° need long lines, Would tatteta atrap- terlal in the dainty shades will do ad-| , : ‘ nue wearing silk hats at all times of ‘The Care of Children. Br sdhs for the friendly Indians meeecats rbot ‘ ping do? BESSIE 8. ic mirably for winter "Informals" and] ,,,G°t YOU" system toughened and you're less apt to dle sud-| day. Is this proper? To the Editor of The Evening World: et Oo the] By making your sixtenn-inch lace early spring wear. Your brown silk hat , JOSEPH BERTRAND. If a few careless parents and motor- ‘feast; brant or geese or partridges and the turkey; cran-| flounce in this manner you will have whirt-waist {8 quite appropriate for at applies to turkeys as well as to men," High hats may be worn with frock| men were punished for neglect of duty PFO m P #0 many street acoidents to children would not occur. If mothers instead of weeping over their injured children woulq keep their children out of danger they would not need to weep. A. OTHUANT, Meaning of “Carnival.” To tho Editor of The Bvening World: ve present wear. conta or with evening dress, They should THE NEW WALKING SKWRTS. Dear Mime, Judtce: x Are the new walking sitrts lined or berry sauce, barberry sauce, squash and corn fritters: Pee lene Ueea yon aceire can A Poti ; esa to the bust. e collar at min and pumpkin ples, plum pudding, nuts, but no| vest is the allover net you speak of An ample and satisfying feast for a Gargan-| uss, la!d in bing pin tucks, and ts un- “Anan appetite, lined to the bust, where it is met by a meth black panne v vest set under the But an examination of six hotel and restaurant| « allops of the lace, and ds studded with of fare for to-day shows how great are the Nberties | 81x Jet or black cabochons and dan- a by chefs with the pattern Puritan menu. What|'\* <0 match Tiny nail heads dordor J AS a narrow velvet band on the upper have tournedos de boeut financiere at a Thanks-| collar and wristband of the th pboard? Or timbales of sweetbreads, hanana frit-| ver net. In the back the » “OF consomme printaniere royal. Or sorbet mara-|{"?, °°, Meet I centre over the net, A The fact that the Marion whitecaps used bicycle Instead of tar in decorating tho luckless MoDonald shows | "2 ve Worn im the morning, how the March of Progress affects even the tar-and-feather | _9*7" He Oan’t Live om §B00, Industry, The next step may be antisaptic horschair in place | T %* Biltor of The Evening World Just worn over a drop skirt? If 80, how |>f microbic feathers, I read an article by Prof. Clarke, of are the drop skirts made, and Is atiffen- Northwestern University, Chicago, ing used at the bottom of the skirts! Gould and Harriman could acarce struggle more flercely|°!iming that an unskilled American and which one to give tho flare? I have lover ‘Colorado Fuel" if the “fuel were $6.60 a ton anthra-| Workman on a salary of $300 per year by "come a walking skirt that sags in the back, feite. i could support his family in comfort and] What does the word ‘carnival’ come although It measures evenly all aronnd. Sa save money, Kindly pubtish my denial; | from? 0 ¥: Can you tell me why it doesn't hang There was a young merchant from Del, and I ask him to prove his assertion. It {s derived from the Latin words straight? MABEL, Who said of hi " UIS DELMAR, fz [Hearnbtcana. vale! smasnlng aes oes 0 sald of himeeif, “I am wel, LOUIS DELMAR, Great Kills, N. ¥, | “carnt’ and “vale.” mest reset pretty idea for any one not varing cor Kingsbridge, That my wares folks Y Qwhen the first Italian ice did not reach us till a|all-black lace walst 1s to have lower BUACK LACE WAIST ‘The newest walking skirts are unlined Goin fue cyel ane prdaige me ent ing Lent, being a form of farewell to y later? vest and the border on collar, cuffs and (Desigaed tor Bessie 8.) and are hung over a drop skirt separate Must advertise if I would sel.”* Lane GN Shert ay wrelantt 3, R, | Saveties and to the eating of meat untt} va upper vest of pale blue, yellow or green ~ Stes a from themsolves, ‘The outer skirt 1 made : 1. R. | master. }fonger comes to market and the coot of our| panne velvet, studded in the black Jet, {ANd probably most satisfactory either a five or seven-gored flare design,| “For everything that is lost something Js found.’ oe Cea kbapeqaei Brest Greatest Number of Sulcides, ds 60 @carce as to be almost unobtainable; a| &. touch of Persian embroidery on the} or a gored upper with circular flounce weight Js [ihiates hed eSrtih To the Editor of The Evening World: “Yes, I notice avery time you lose patience you find fault." | ose, Avold starchy foods, mitk, butter cannot match the cloth, however, use| or faced at the bottom, but {s not stif-| Two whales are to be burned in Southern New Je: and sweets, Exefbise regularly In ¢ome |, 1, oportion to sahabitants and has the self-colored rep or iaftetn silk for alened, ‘The drop skirt consists usually |tuel. At that rate what accommodations will there be after (27, Semnasium:, stay in the open alr) Tetteq States the fewest? ciroular flounce on foot of the skirt,|of a gored upper portion strengthened by |a while for political Jonahs? as much as poselble, walk a great deal N. C. BERRY. making sleeves of the lower part of the} a deep-shaded flounce, finished at the seo EI and take no naps In-the daytime, pecs cag Galereniae Kraan What country has the most suicides waist to brighten It up a bit, If you] about the foot, and is amply hemmed teal duck may properly replace it. But|70 MAKE OVER BROWN BROADCLOTH. of the venison, which is not shown {n| Dear aime. Judice fel menus? Alas! the game laws banished it| | !nclose sample of a brown prondcioth 2p ; and would Uke you to tell me how to ble make it over so that it will be stylish] old akirt to the elbows, and finishing] bottom with a blas band underfacing of| * “How graceful: y ye 0 Ky ly you carve the bird!" Dountful Scales. nual sulcide rate, the percentage being a8 prepared for The Byening World |nd » not cost ton.much, I have not) wih Cull pa to the wrist of the alk.| iteelf with an interiining of canvas or ‘Th’ admiring boarders cried. - ‘To the Rditor of The Evening World: 81.1 per 100,000 inhabitants, Spain hae steward and designed for “persons puUeaS i as ; e skirt was only al A @eep cape collar opening at the bust| hair cloth, about three inches wide and “Yes, I was a gtone-carver once," WiAS In @ market recently and no-| the lowest rate, its percentage being $2.07 a plate it served for | mopiece skirt w ith a panel in the left] Hne over an all-over eotu lace vest, with] as many ruffles or platings on the out- The panting man replied, ticed that some scales registered |1.4 per 100,000, ‘That of the United States ‘would cost front of the silk inclosed and was|three of your fancy buttons on each as desired. There are many reasons nearly half a) pound with nothing year It would have cost $1.81, The|trimmed with the ribbon Incloved. 1| side will give your old-fashioned Is ig L I. a 5 waist | why a skirt “sags” at the back, the prin-} The Brooklyn Bridge doesn't lead from Manhattan to the|on them; that is, the pointer did not accounts in part for its rise in here. Eve, Pvaiapise SE Ene, pees ut hula stylish gppearance. Lay the} opal one being that few women stand | "Pearly Gates,” but when a man divides his shoes with “4 mand at mero, but fait & pound | To the Hdltor of The Evening World: i . nk it) Persian trimming around edge of the] correctly, The straight front corset does|newsboy and a destitute couple are cared for on it at about | forward, #0 that When & plece of meat} I read once there waa @ man in the must have faded, Will I be able to use| coll: a Istbands } it CA Feared MDa Naty Ie led prea sik peda om the nego & good seal Saad opviating thie funk. jeep gaane time, ts evident many who cross it are headed Cyelabing say two pounds) was plated | Went whore real Rie “Goda tight when there were lots of in| rfdon and use as a ‘dust" ruffle on a Fae the porealine dfop ast of mute color. 1 er FENer sto

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