The evening world. Newspaper, November 21, 1908, Page 9

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¥Eventng@ World Daily Magazine, BONOHOIOWG POSSOHES HA SSESDHILSS H RHPSSSSESSE PESOS LOGE W eyey « 1 ® o ® 22-Yoar-Old Author of Sensational Play oi Humor Is Essential to , | the Welfare of Us All: 2 — Studied Slum Life Before Writing, “Salyv John PEODOSSHHDOPSGEW HS BP HHGDODPOTGEVHOPOHOH + | y, Novembet 217 1908. DPRBH®| sve DOODDOOOOOHODOOOHOS | Immortal Interviews No. 4.—Bluebeard Explains Why He Married Early and Often BOO ere DIO DHVDOOOOOCOGOIGHS HHOSEGED By John K. Le Baron. PBSIDWSHHANHHHIHHOHGHO IHGA HaHa arava eee ssi the “wings” and after grinning jJoy-| A ABA in no better asset th life than end cheer, B Ch ] D | | 9 Tt ts the best known antidote for sulclde A aries arnton. ‘ i By Helen Rowland. A directory of the world’s philanthr ele should contain the names “ sy ! exclaimed ‘ -\Itke yellow hair or a dimpl sings } enh Das not peter tiniae SE Se oe oe ek ee es ca fe matiatal IE you! were av the Haokett cle, ag I followed the butler And sometimes,” rejoined Bluebeard, t Humor 4e the lifo of fe. oe Theatre on Tuesday night you eaw | fomewhat doudt-| “like other fairy gifts, it turns out to f a six or more feet of boy launch from fully Into his pri-jbe a curse Instead of a blessing. Look CSE 229 UB al oltht 1? UH) Cabs sai et i vate apartmenta jat the trouble my fascinating w + & @ootor who tm devold of humor should be prohibited at the Hotel Di- | brought on me, for instanc Tt ts the salvation of the rostri s into Mrs. Fiske's inscrutable abolo. "A lady! | “The troub’ I inquired wonders ee Ale aN phenomenal inttnem -aifeadha Teme tinee his happy fac- face swing down to the footlights Deltehted, I'm | tngly. . classical Americans of the ninete 0 ‘, * o kiss my hand | sadly. @epended iargely on his inimitable humor to make real hts literary gods. roaring, composite creature, hungry as he led with ‘Oh, I retorted with a tose of Te ts because he radiates good cheer that Senatur Depew ts in such demand. for a word or two. In this tender- perfect to my chin, needn't have acquired 1 fem fe the ohfef stock in trade of the commercial drummer foot of the drama you beheld the | the most comfort- the marrying habit. Really, I @houll ‘will often sell goods where an argument fails, " ie “ able chalr in the have thought that after one or two—er ( A preacher without humor is @ pulpit misfit Lie ot waited Balvation room —unfortunate attempts"— What most genial of men, Dr. Henry Van Dyke, says: “There t# auch a thing Nell." He didn't look at all like “Now,” 1 erfed | “Ha!” Bluebeard broke in with an ee taking ourselves and the world too seriously. a author of “Little Rivers” owes much of his popularity to his art of ut!l- thougit it might frighten him. ¥ humor. his play; in fact, he looked as But there he was, Edward Sheldon, taller than his years and slimmer than his play, a beardless youth whose work involuntarily, as I sank among the ushtons, “I know how you dd it!" frontcal laugh, “It's always after the unfortunate attempts and the bit» t experiences that people want to fo one ever courts the company of a man with a uch, ia dnooln used humor as a mighty lever to shape events. “We will go to Mr. Blinn's dressing-room,” he hastened to say, and replied. “But I Al She gentle underourrent of humor that flowed through Beecher's sermons, ‘Indeed? Bluebeard put up hfe mon- try again, isn't it? Look at your di- ; ANGSMMEB TOS CHATSUFTAGK Wasi tne AGGIE GP touch Ge Min deren had gone to the head and possibly the heart of our most intelligent and cl TRGRIN AHA IeBRON CAL: We ithe jYorce court graduates! ‘The oftener Wheve 2 @ purifying, ramitying virtue in Robert Collyer's smile, most Interesting actress, | valf-tender, half-tnqutring glance. jthey fail, the oftener they try. ‘If at eye Ge Cus invent capt da ue abet Gall ACLs In a night this boyish playwright became the theatrical wonder of his | ty get 80 many wives,” Tea im mee tee you know,” and fot ve leug’ over James T, Field's owl, Ma pwain's frog and , % 7 chad Macey Sim hoy AD CoS) edad] NMA did ah orl belle PaniGRKRa le 16 ave cilasea mallek, LJ [ieee erate ct faa " bit Lee when we put him Cae) at twenty- | ade beard, and your bald "abst, er “And the more you lose," I interpo- he man who makes men laugh makes the world detter. maiden “intervie ie confessed to twenty-two. He faced your age, and—and your reputation, lated, “the more rect you becomet tew have hed Dr, Holmes's experience, which prevented his being as funny ‘MS Rew experience with eyes that lookd lke two interrogation points | MOINS Nall al aL 9 A SieatecurSeE ast tale ote eas Srebaa under glass. But he didn’t ask questions, Ho dkin't want to know|« Ipc fs the first eli OH Oa) BLED IBN el Buk CE ST il > 4, 9008 nature ts the Dest thing that ever happened to a man. what I wanted to know, He merely glowed with youthful enthusiasm | is ts the firs feofue/jea) EbOURnaehby. cere) cove (etl A camer ate ee Ara CTIIRCUeRE TRESS } fumor and sunshine—“the heavenly twins'—are the arcl-enemles of crime My first impression ot him was that pink cheeks do not necessarily go with| time the play-writ- | Satho mngle charm, the devotional at- Woman that makes you want another | aaeees! Nee eee Hd a & pink intelligence. There was red blood in his bratn as well as in his| | titude, the perfectly fascinating manner |the moment you have married her, just A play. I felt sure of that ing fever has broken that nofwoman on earth can resist,” T dan 4s the only animal that laughs. It ts an erciusive, God-given pre- | then he bolted out of the theatre lobby in the direction of the stage door. out in our family.’” haven't said a thing!" pro tested Bluebeard. \| itive. With a whtapéred ‘S-s-h-h!’ lest Nell should be disturbed in her “quiet | Jo," T agreed. ‘You're too clever t ‘t de owr duty to make the most and the hest of it. scene,” we stole along the narrow passage and up the iron stairs lke | for that. You are perfectly aware that ‘ iterne says: “I am persuaded that every time a man sm{les—and much more) juvenile outlaws about to rob an empty barn. ioe nds Obs Mar tey, ay Woman FADES. hen he inughs—it adds something + this fragment of Ife."" tod pity the man who never laughs! {Iume wrote a history of England It is @ great we k. Jt makes men ¢hink, velled in a ‘Bis Army Manoeuvres, | [religious emotionalism. It was neces- | | Sary to show this, and so I made the | “No,” said young Mr. Sheldon, play simple, almost clates is the kind that never comes out in words, but just expresses itself in every small act from the careful, ten- 3 5 : re- primitive, in its | der way tn which you hold her o} 3 ON: wrote a history of Engiand. It is great ork. ni y P alu Nye y ne & great work. It makes men| sponsively, from the top of a trunk, ‘I emotionalism. But in the story 1 have cloak to the significance you put In oth were benefactors of their race. did not go to the slums for my play. I) Used my imagination. ‘The play fe not your volce when you ask her ff she ‘We ought to be as cheerful as we can," says John Lubbock, “if ont: went there for my facts, It was all | Photographic. I wrote {t in a month, | kes Bluo Points or the sollcttude with ‘3 i er ChA ed dele A} only | very matter-of-fact and business like, 1| Just @ year ago. As a matter of fact {i | ch you pass her the olives or hold tse to be happy ourselves Is a most effectual contribution to the happiness ‘ l which you p hold bs ithers."” ¥ woe wanted facts and ! gathered them just aia ees ae was not work at all, an umbrella over her. And It's so re 2 5 as a writer might for magazine | !t was only pleasure. During the month | freshing!” I finished with a sigh of ; The Indian seldom laughs. But who wants to be an Indian? article. To get them I went to the head |! arranged to take afternoon lectures at | pleasure. ‘I was susplotous of him,” says the cynte, “unt!! T heard bin jaugh.”’ of the Salvation Army in Chicago and| Harvard, and so 1 had my m 5 | “Why refreshing?” “Care to our coffin adds a na! no dor told him J should lke to learn something | free. The play took me away from “Because It's so rare—nowadays,” I ' And every grin so merry draws one out.” about the work the Army was doing.” | Cambridge—very far away, I'm afraid,” sald sadly, "Men don't take time to be iene you didn’t visit the New York | he added with a laugh subtie, or solicitous, or tender, or fas- | | slums?” cinating any more. ven when they Not until after 1 haa written ny AL Good Luck Story. stop to. give you a compliment they | | play. Iam a Chicagoan, and the scenes| The most surprising part of hia story just hurl {t at you in a big chunk that | of the play as originally written were | Was yet to come. My mental picture of ein Gun CART Ciscoe are clot oun er @ laid In the Chicago slums, South § |the unknown author dragging his play even pretend to be devoted any long: (a street and West Madison, in Chicago, | from one manager to another was all “Men ARID selfish! averred Blue-| ” are very similar to Tenth avenue and | wrong. head) i virtue I've just lost my thirty-third! Cherry Hill, and so {t was only neces-| “When ft was finished,” he sald, “1 “Oh, selfishness has nothing to dolas there t thing about on § i cota, | i ul S there is something about one cocks { \ By Robert W. Chambers sary to change the names of the| Was eorry. With no hope that it would |with it I returned, promptly. ‘The| tail that makes you want another the ‘ streets, While at Harvard 1 saw a|ever be produced T sent it to a broker, most selfish men have sometimes he aoment you have swallowed it, It ree WOOCIOGOIONG. COa® great deal of the Beston slums, and I} and virtually forgot it. But a mont! the most fascinating. Look at Louis | qui new Wife to take the bad tast® am also familiar with Denver's slums | later I got a letter telling me M XIV. and Don ianaitordl ronilorit wee : : Re Hey erate é oe : a er_telling me Mrs XIV. £ the old one out of your mouth. OTE e Otc 100T. oby Robert WW: Chel Zaileen a8 ya took her to the door: | and the poor districts of London. But | Fiske had taken it. It seemed too good |and—and all the rest of the born ladies’ | “And 1 supt lirejainedhithatiow Reed corer re, MENTS. | Poe you ene If You are not—I'll walt | jt was In Chicago that I found what i |to ve true. You can imagine how I men, who have broken feminine hearts} can get so used to anything, even | Philip Selwyn has left the o 90 iwheret he asked, wanted. I put In a whole summer go- | zeit.” with as ttle compunction as they }trouble or the family jars or the miae Mn viscerenenenin oo ee ene ce ehait ro" |S About with members of the Salva-| “sow did you feel on Tuesday night?” would feel in cracking a nut or a Joke. | night curtain lectures, that you will mis® arning to New York, Again iano i vineienitec i tion Army, not so much to study slum) “Bully!” he exclaimed. “ ‘I'm having a Jits just a matter of taking @ little }it when you no longer have it.” Nine les eearoh rere Feed tO Nis, hea acne miracles were | iife as to get a running knowledge of | sood time if no one else is,’ I said to time.” "Yes," siched Bluebeard, “your morns { apo its ‘ 4 secon nie n them he saw now the work of the Army was organ-|myself, and 1 proceeded to make the | ‘And a litle pains,” put in Bluebeard rap may become as necessary. to ' Teter eG paisa ae Ne He peers ee Re ized. I wanted the Salvatloneanmy, for} most of it Tt was wonderful to see “And a little ingenuity T finished. | conte ent as your morning cocks arentened) disgre Saat eS ne gay confusion, | my background, and I ok Mt as TI afrs, Fiske making Nell all ana more ‘It's a matter of looking at a woman | tail to your appetite, or your toothe aR pays ae cova gee “iH, ” ais is PALLETS arted four it, I did not tell the oMcers I /than 1 had fan her Mrs. iske instead of looking through her, of tall t Whether matria dntiarium. ‘Peese expendi: pal Fanart esiapine copwaele play, “In view of! makes me realize the elemental nature ing 1p hen Instead) of over ner Hos ony not stimulant Ike blacl ee ae uling ne conducted Drina the way the Army was shown on the jor the woman te T neve waiting on her and protecting her rs in can APOC, AEC inn to divorce Alixe. reeting-piace on tt 8; 01 4 of Ne c d A f er did before joing. hos je things fo r { oot Ruthven should the la i qncerch tieistalta; outside iietagedin gine pelle ot Nery oor binen Did you realize how shocking GM CU USE ea | ou to depend on it. Fos A NTE all was thronged with the younger other plays I thought tt wise to keep} oray you were when Rut what's the use," interrupted ad i Nabe op) RM Gat) Hamiswes the Zor of marmring Bile, ap and already thoir partners were re- my plan to myself. There was no dite} 0 ay ERA NY Bluebeard, “in these days with all the nly euleplavings allibroa ect The tastes at lenatn elle herse’t, turning to the tables flouity In learning all T wanted to know. ee bell-boya and hired walters and maid, ateniatlounlercne Gene weriie ‘Billpte Affaire prowner, and: actly ta) Find me when you can get away," | Members of the Army took me every? 7 sie ‘ut nover ed, quick to take the and flunkeys about to do those little | Thy. Uilntycthid cw itetiesal Tveraide, where the Gerards a: 1 n, looking once more at Sel- Where and showed me everything,” | 1k® Ht Never occurred to me that things for the price of a tp, and’ SelaollOnesamelinirne nlite lt ¢ pending the summer. wyn ina is signa fe now." I waited to hear of interesting adyen- |? ee e-sconaldlered et isn't useful!’ I broke in dramat Indeed! | murmured sympathetteal- : Again, as of old, outstretched | tures, but young Mr, Sheldon merely | ‘7B nee fey truthful | catty. ‘s beautiful! Champagne isn't How did you lose her?” 0 t 1} " e 1 vation > are sort that t a jc isn’t useful and tlowers s ge > hand—the ttle formality symbolizing #Mfted lis position on the trunk and | useful and mus: wd shrugged his shoul CHAPTER XH. to him the Importance of all that ee shook his head. ation Army tries to reach, and land ice-cream and kisses aren't use: tle—er dent to her (BATA) cerned them. He touched {t “Phere were no adventures, I'm sorry | Without them the play would he fal ful, are they?” and I glanced at Bluc © irightened visibly, Ars A is “A blentot,” she said, : to say, My pligrimages were not epi- | @¥ aim was to show the moral wy beard defantly. Id stay and have a cup di . rs Amoris. ‘On the lawn out there-turther out, | #odical. Nothing happene But T was! )reught about by the work of the “N—n—no,” be agreed, doubtfully 1 ered, rising hastily, “ft $ET DON'T care; people don't dle of in the starlight," he whispered—his Satisfied, I got my facts through th eA eneLEN Ar eo ORR He Bes ABE , Bluebeard, Jum overeating. And I'll take the » broke—"my_ darling""— Salvation Army and then used my He spoke rapidly, but not glibly, and that goes. But in these busy days torte’ with @ nasty old medicine—truly I will, bent her head, passing slowly be ination, It only remained for me to | ls sincerity burned through his Nght an 48 too rushed to cultivate the Sir charming ) Boots, 1f you'll come and etvo {tore nim, turned, looked back, her ane |Mitroduce @ love story and make it | poised glasses. eigh - Don - Quixote at —since thi ( me.” swer in her ‘In every | human.” Pa, Miphe younger Craig maiden ait9 aD-| fn, teeny line wad enter of henge) Mr” Shelton mentioned thin ax | Wrote a Tragedy at 19, TOnret fk cate coemgtaa peared to be bent upon self-destruction; ge Stood 1 her, ®§ though it were the most simple matter! “Ie ‘Salvation Nell’ your first play?" can't be cultivated any more thar mured sweetly, and Boots's eyes opened wider and “i 1000 ® moment, Looking beck: in the world i inquired, poetry or genius or scariet fever. It B uCY glance Al tie oeer dons ustin and Boots were talking volubly p : a bes i ey hurried ot 1 4 \wider in sheer amazement at the ca- hon hn returrety nena BANS buy) Hay i " | “No, he answered with a faint smile has to be born in you. It’s a gif re under t of ruche to make pacity of woman in embryo for rations now Wrote Play in a Month. I wrote a three-act play when T wa bestowed by the good fatries at birth that my I still on straight. t Selwyn’s Chaosite, And then there'll |.*T® Slde—youns, frank, confident fel- street," he said in reply to a question. | “Is it a comed | }lows, nice in bear f be no more Drina and Daisy— Hello!" |WN% nie in bearing, of good speoch +7 thought avout st for two years and | No, a tragedy.” His smile brondened he broke off, astonished—"Well, upon | Hep Pe became more and more convinced that A three-act tragedy at nineteen?” — | DRE je no style my word of words! Phil Selwyn!—or I'm “Anh suleige waited their pretty part- the work of the Army, with {ts conflict “Oh, I began earlier than that,’ he HE if t 4 ‘a broker!” i He of the younger set, gossiping !: and contrast, its beauty and pathos, | confessed, merrily. “When T was n “J. got my fe of dress that “Phil!” exclaimed Nina, “Oh, Austin! ae , on stairs and veranda jn Karrulous was full of dramatic possibilities, My | i\ttle boy J had a toy theatre and I used sults the young- qi ad you never told us’— [Reena filmy ‘silks and Ices and gomewhat vague idea of what ft all +o write plays for st and act them with er girls more perfectly ; Austin, ruddy and bland, camo up to | ienteved expectancy i meant was perfectly expressed in acard| puppets. With the family and ser-/ through the Salva- ERPS make bie excunes; a little whirlwind of The long windows were opén to the on the wall of a Salvationiat's home in| vants to count upon 1 was always sure shan 499 ohedn: qoltement passed like a brisk breeze | Y¢Tanda: Selwyn, with his arm through which I found myself one day a yoar| or a good audience,” 5 style. It not alone ts t over the clustered tables as Selwyn fol- Cereid walked tp the rating a:d ago last summer. There was the text| 1) the language of Jim, who was tion Army and then charmingly youthful lowed; and @ dozen impulsive bare arma /)%% Wego cap traarant, Starlit’ for my play—'Man’ Extremity Ts God's /rgnting salvation and booze down on | and becoming; it also . Were outstretched to greet him as he "8% A v Rr away they heard Opportunity.’ The spirit of the Salva-| ine stage, Goethe had nothing on young F {s ctical, for the passed, returning the bright, eager salu: |” sea Intoning the hymn of the four tion Army's work really goes back 1,50 | ss, gheidon of Chicago. 1 was curious used my tmagina- | guimpes can he made tations on every hand, winds years, and it ts this spirit I have tried /iq know whether he had inherited ‘ | 5 “ “Train was Inte as umual,’” observed | Then the elder man withdrew his arm | to put into ‘Salvation Nell.’ I have | dramatic iatinet erited his u ‘It never occurred to) 110m washanie inate Avastin. “Philip and I don’t mean to ®M4 #tood apart for a while, A little tried, too, to show that the Army | "he answered, twisting into an- | tion. mal and In sufiicte Seer sufficient to maintain a smal! garrison. he ke “There'll be a couple of reports sala to himself, with a shudder, butt into this very grand function— Hello, Gerald: Hello, Giedys! © * ¢|!t and walked straight out into the scale and pulls them up on their feet, | Pity owriting fever has broken out In me that my play quent change, and ev- Where's our obscure corner below the | Waste To make these people swallow the! vow, he added, Ingenuously, It will ery mother knows salt, Nine? * Oh, over th: — The song of the sea was rising now, ethical pill !t must be sugar-coated with be very interesting to see it in print.’ ’ ry that it ts the sleeves Belwyn had already cought sigh of | 18 the strange iittle forest below, deep —-— ola might be considered, which sol and wear the table destined for him. A deeper *7ODK the trees, el ights broke out A d M h f I : | out while the rest of ccident Is Mother of Invention. color crept across his bronzed face as he stepped forward, and hiw firm hand here, oan {i, rouwi the purple gloom of the moor- jong ume thereafter the cla still spread over the gourd or pressed into for the washable Her loveliness had been a memory, 884 (he stars’ briliianoy silvering her wiokerwork before the potter's art assumed tte final independence. Even then dresses that so many he had supposed ho realized it to hin Walthg—ylelding in pallid silence to the wickerwork was retained, 4 sort of attest of its origin, Thue it te by girls wear within doors welt; but the superb, fresh beauty of the |* 8M ie crushed in then, looking into govtdental circumstances or by such as iie without our purpose, foresight, and during even the cold wt daxed him ere Was a sirange eyes, dumb, wordless, power that man gradually ts led to the acquaintance of improved means of | est weather. new radiancy, & living brightness to bey, Tle) Moewly (he palo sgeranent gatietying his wants, saye Prof, Hrnet Mach tn tho Chicago Tribune, The quantity of ma that weemed almost unreal, Exquisitely unreal her voice, (oo, and the t Dent head, crowned with the splond of her hair; and the slowly ratued eyes, two deep biti» miracles tinged with the 1e haze of aromatic smoke, Gerald k close to him, happy, ex- clted, shy by turns, Others came up on later he descended to the lawn, crossed acroms the | vanished, unseen Brier water, then wed au | d-rose tint orept into sy faoo) her arma clung to his shout. dove, higher, tightened around hie neok, Aud from her ilps she gave inte hie ine woul and body, mulltles# as God ow “The Idea of a Salvation A came to me one day when I saw of Salvationists marching down y play band nineteen, I may drag it runk one of these days. A Family Affair. out of 1 It is called reaches people far down in the soctal|other emile. “This {8 the firat time the ‘The invention of the bridge may have been migmested by the trunk of a tree whioh had fallen athwart @ mountain torrent; that of the hammer by the use of m stone eocidentally taken Into the hand to orack nuts. The use of fire prob- ably started in and has beon disseminesed from regions where yoloantc erup- tions, hot aprings, apd burning jet: of natural gas afforded an opportunity for | elosed aoantataaliminandtatanad ¥ va aie to, Maven: ho Jooked tang By Prof, Ernst Mach, | ent be pretty made ‘or & moment neither spoke; she | &” eadliy Into the darkness aroun SMALL hole in the ground with fire kindled tn it conatit B ” rom eaahmene, 9) eedaiees tha dated Gor —"\ idm, Suddenly he saw her—a pale blur BM) tive stove, The flesh of the quarry, wrapped with ae He ‘0 be truthful, Johallis, from Nght Then Drina caught his hands, and |!" the dusk, boiled by contact with heated stones, Cooking by stones wat | weight serge, from Bileen's loosened in his clasp and fet Hite H also done in wooden vessels. Holow gourds were protected from the | wool taffeta or any away as the child said distinctly: ery | 18 'f you, Philip?” fro by coats of olay. Thus, from the burned clay accidentally origin- similar material, and kiss you afte: jit can't be done{ She stood waiting as he came up ajed the enveloping pot, which rendered the gourd superfluous, although for @ {t also can be utilized numbers to mean fre- dress is in good This model | the daring, 1 simply tried | yndition terial required for the medium size (18 years) fe 6 1-4 yards %, 4 1-2 | yards % or 3 3-8 yards | 44 inches wide, hues of paradise Rave ils ike Gave 608 hala Bevena qujetly observing and (urning to practical aocount the properties of fire, | Pattern No, 6160 “There's no use,’ sighed Drina, “I nlintatartna Sree eit ener Berge 4 ‘The eapactty to profit by expertence might well be set up as a test of intelli- | 4s cut in elzes for girls shall not be able to dance, Hoots, | NY SME BE TARR Olinge Ye IN EMO gence, ‘Thiv power varie# considerably in men of the same race, and increases | | of 8, 10, 12 and 14 years there's to be a dance, you know; eo rn “MY OF & aS TRA enormouvly as we advance from the lower animals to man, The former are of age. git on the stairs with Daisy Craig) and - Hmtted in this regard ulmost entircly “© the reflex actions which they have | Aisiia Quand sanaeniatiass Me Laiee You'll come to me vecasionall n't inhertied with their organism; they are almost totally incapable of individual our” ae amen ow oom experione, and considering thelr simple wants are scarce need 0 Y ETT TITRE Mpg Te. A Ue i “rey Tere re Parory Wen nestle pe PSR eM gt er ip aged of it. The prannen Call or wend by mail to Til! BV WoRLD WAY MAW Made & purely mechanical move use al |) te 4 udveuture, separated trem the mows of his aqua 4 Bikes partition lewrm aft ts ON FASHION BUREAU, No. 132 Be m en " it oh aot, Maer An teed strawberry “ ‘ up tunis dosepe YH the lapse of a months that he cannot attack these fishes with impunity, | Obie Tork, Bend 0 coms 18 sold OF SAMA SOF S808 DES ad ob ; dy ih wee Meadar'e Brewing ‘Thess IMPORTANT--Write your name aad addreer plalaly, + Bina gave the Ss ondidy What le moro, he lexves them in peace even after the removal of the partitien, Cauhgh be wi bet & pivange Aah at once A ways specify sige wanted 4

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