The evening world. Newspaper, April 27, 1912, Page 3

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sSos8 ‘Gent Taft was coming back hi Monday “to finish his job on that hat. Reosevelt made it plain that he en- Perea the situation, while members of the party insisted that the action of the , President in agreeing to go out of his ‘Wey to Brockton, where no President das deen for seventy-five years, was a eentession of worry over the outcome. Aiviauelly to th on eee Adding to Taft’s iad Trip “(He Says, “I'll Be Speaking Here Too Next Monday.” Peaks TO . WORKERS. Colonel Declares He Will Give His Opponents All the Fight They Wane, @ROCKTON, Mass, April 77.—Rerter Yewe for workingmen and soctal and| fiustrial justice were advocated by Col, Roosevelt here to-day. About 15,00 People greeted him at the station and gave him an enthusiastic reception. “The power of the boar," sald Roose- Welt, “is conditional upon his associa- with the big findnctal interests Col. Roosevelt said when he became Pregident he found that the elght-hour lem regarding Government employees was not rigidly enforced and he saw that it was enforced. He said labor conditions in the Panama Canal Zone were now the best of any) government work in the world. Roosevelt further aeclared “We can Never get the type of industrial legis- fation we need as long as we have i rene and professional politicians in "The ‘Colonel expressed his willingness te give his political opponents “all the fight they wanted.” He then participated in a’ through the business section, by Major James A. Frye Camp, Spanish Wer Veterans, with a band. Both at the station and along the atreets Col. parade escorted Reosevelt was repeatedly cheered. Following the parade he proceeded in an automobile to Middleboro and Tavn- tem, planning to board the specia’ ‘again at Taunton for New Bedford. train BOSTON, April 27.—"'Well, what of it? Tl be speaking up this way myself on Monday.” ‘With a characterintic shrug of his }q@moulders and a snap of his teeth, Col. ‘Roosevelt today uttered the above ex- , lametion wi he was told that Presi- on Roosevelt went to Brockton on the 9.5 (@tetn and his program for to-day in- {chuded speeches there, Middleboro, Traunton, New Bedford and Fall River, ‘fetuming to this city at 610 or the! might speech. He will spend Sunday at ‘the home of W. Sturgess Bigelow. At the Taft headquarters here ar- Tangements were perfected to-tay for the second visit of the President to the State on Monday, when he wt!) take wp the Roosevelt trai! through 1: ‘stol, Plymouth, Essex and Middlesex Coun- tes, A atatement was tseued to-day by the supporters of Senator La Follet claiming that the Wisconsin aspira for the Presidency would poll 20,000 11 the preferential, primaries on Tuesday. e@av. Wootrow Wilson, who spoke at SSeecocrene rally here last night, left is morning for speeches to-day at ‘Worcester, Springfield and Holyoke. Me the Clark headquarters it was that ex-Senator Charles A. Towne New York, Gov.-elect Robinson of and ex-Senator Fred G. Du- would reach here late to-day and 4m eevera! Boston wards, as well Brockton and Chelsea to-night. of the ‘Houn Dawg” song a given wide distribution. —_————_—_ MAYOR GREETS FRENCH RODIN BUST COMMITTEE. Makes Welcoming Speech and in Turn Gets Pat on His Execu- tive Back. Mayor Gaynor recetved at the City ial to-day the members of the French Aelegation which brought over the bust lof Le France by Rodin, to be placed the memorial lighthouse, Crown Potnt, Lake Champlain. The bust is & gitt from the French nation. {M. Lenel, the French Consul in this city, introduited the French visitors in- e Mayor who exchanged e jpalutetions with each after which h oad: “Tam very glad indeed to receive you jgentiomen, ani inter on in the day I to attend a reception to you—your iret reception in the City of New York-— I can then greet you more tntt- ely, I may have something to say ‘to you then. I will content myself now @imply welcoming you and ex- sto you how glad 1 am to re- Ad4ressing the Mayor tn French, fol- lowing his expre-sions of welcome to ithe Gelegation, M. Hanotaux Gabriel | it ea great ‘tion upon their to present their # to the first ‘of the great City of New York, nd also a gentieman who js so Koewn to all whe e Interested tn @tudy of jurispru @, and vhe great jconcern of mankind, justice throughout ithe world, We are delighted \to meet Injuries in Street Fatal, James lie years old, of No. 150 street, died tor dag in Bellovue Hospital, Hebron wax crossing Ti at Bevent rth etreet 62) when he wi ed down and carried along in front Of @ car, Motorman John McGuire of Me. 377 East Soventy-seventh strees ploked up Hebron, twenty Fitteth Seeds, 8] a plece of bread, THE EVENING WORLD, | “we Girl’s Earnings of $4 Weekly Are the Main Support of the House- hold, and They Subsist Principally on Fare of Four Herrings a Day. Four of the Children Go to School, and the Bread- winner Walks to Work to Save Carfare to Buy a Summer Dress—Con- tentment in Poverty. ' Sophie Irene Loeb. Here {s the actual cost of living of | family of seven ‘at No. 142 Essex | street with a weekly. income of $8.10: ‘Mine rolls per day, 6c., and o: loaf of bread, Sc—1c. Butter, 6o.. Four children going Ao achcol het Ro. exch for lunch Four herring, 16c. per Saturday and Sunday. Sugar (per week) ‘Tea (per week) Soap (per week). Potatoes, six pounds, per week (2 Tos. for 7c.) Onions (per week). Re.; rice, 4c.; total.. @as (last month), per week, Paying on sewing machine instal- ment, 6c. per week. Clothing, ipstalment per week... Shopgirl's carfare one way each Gay (per week) Ment (por week). Total . Did you leave your breakfast table this morning with that grumpy feeling? ‘Was your grape frutt not chilled enough, = not the bacon quite as crisp as or did you have to use milk in- stead’ of cream in your coffee? And does this, that or the other little griev- ance loom up like a horrible problem 4 does it all seem sordid and un- happy? Well, then, let me tell you that the bread line on the east side has just taken a summer vacation and there will be mo bread given at 1 o'clock tn the morning until next Thanksgiving Day. Also, let mo tell you what I found at No. 42 Hesex street. Having climbed four fights, the s ways lined with little tots in mi chatter, each looking up emilingly assed, I entered a flat of three room: ‘boasting of only two windows, altuated in the one living and bedroom. A woman sat sewing, thus éontributing $2.10 per week toward apport of the family. ‘The father has not steady em: having no trade, but attends © a fur- nace on Sundays for a week-day man, for which he receives $2 a week. main support of the famlly the oidest girl, employed as cash girl, receiving 4 per week, thus making the family income aggregate $8.10 per week, has quite a d nce to go to y after graduation, and in or |der to save 5 cents each day rides to work in the morning, but walks hom WHEN THERE !8 NO MONEY) NOTHING i8 BOUGHT. “You must be heavily in debt. How| © answered, amilingly, resources, “wo are not much in debt. | When we do not have money to pay we do noi buy, But one must figure very cloedty one dollar and a balance owing on last month's rent, which will be pald when Mamie receives her wages this week. T owe a Lalance on my sewing machine, which I pay regularly every week, and also on some clothing which I bought in the same way. Any little balance.left during the week goes toward materiai, | thread, &c., for making my own chil- dren's clothes. Many times, however, t make these out of some of my own old ones.” Wherewpon she brought out two cards showing the exact amount ald on the above items every week. The four little tots, two boys and two girls, aged respectively twelve, ning, seven and five. who go to school. each received during the winter two cents for their lunch, For this two cents they bought from a pushcart vendor one sausage and a piece of bread for one cent and a lass of lemonade for the other cent. But lately this two cents Is being 84 There {s a school twelve blocks away from thelr home which gratuitously furnishes a lunch of soup and bread, and now there cht!- dren walk this distance for their educa- tion that their le mite may be added to the fami! hequer, HOW DOES THE FAMILY MAN. AGE TO LiVEetT The high cost of living ts not a prob- Jem with this family. In fact, any- to them, In the morning nine rolls are purchased for six cents, Hach child gets roll and a cup of tea before starting our for school, Mamie, the cash «irl takes a roll with her for her luni Once in a jo when Mamle can ing she saves her five cents car fare | and buys some real frutt for her lunch along with the roll. Just now in these fine mornings se ts saving these nickels find something to eat when hungry, come home from school they are gly. the dally five cent, worth of butter golng as far as tt can, and a plece of herring. ‘The eldest boy xells papers after school and is a enabled to’ occasionally bring heme @ On Friday soup is made from: | One pound of ment, 170.5 beans, | yyment, } her work, but she is very proud of the} fact that she obtained this position tm- | (two pou! making ohildren's | dresses, She makes one of these dresses! ring a day. every day and receives 3% cents apiece, | coffee Mkew!se, who {s|0f mil jend of the week, Saturday | they have thelr “teast’ da on this small income?" | makiny a total of 2 cen reluctant to tell of thelr meagre) q. ‘At present I owe my grocer | Mme co! | thing that costs anything ts a pleasure | walk to her work as well in the morn- | that she may have @ summer dress | later on. for the F Phere are no set rules for mead hours in this family. The main thing. is to | | about | Wary iii? fa MOTHER, THREE few bananas, which {s indeed a luxury. The family consumes about four he: g&8 are unknown and They are most un- | thought of iuxuries, and when I asked the mother “how about milk?" she smiled faintly and sald: “We have not had mill for about six months, when the children were {Il. Strange to say, continued, not have things they taste for them. The bought three cents’ worth thinking to please little Fan- nle, my youngest. The chilld had actual forgotten the taste of milk and rather Aisliked it,” Two or three times a week, sometime in plas of the herring they have potatoes “But potatoes are so hts is for 7 cents)," explained the mother, “and it takes so many and wo {don't ike to owe anything. But at the nd Sunday, A large pot of soup {s cooked, which is made {o last two days. The soup Is made from one pound of soup meat, 17 cents; rice, 4 cents; beans, 2 cents Their rent 48 $12 per month. They hi three rooms. I asked the mother what would better things for them. She answered told that riches uo not alway pin but neither does »p | With my little trials I would ot give up one of my children. They beth ntent and content {8 everythin: If we just had enough work to make a Nttle more money I would want for nothing more, Steady work is the best “Charity xood in ite way; for the time being. But to be pay for everything one gets as one goes long know of nothing better, And, while 1t {s hard at times to see the children want for little things, yet wo! jook forward to the time when we wil! have plenty of work in order to get these things.” On account of lack of funds the bread Ane at Lo'clock !n the morning, where a operation unt!! next ever, Mrs. Bird, « for Medicine on Ti Erma Rohan, fifty years ol actress living in the furnished room} house of Mrs, Allee Smith, at No. West One Hundred and Fifteenth was found dead tn bed in her room e this morning. Dr. De Sautelle of Hn lem Hospital sald she had been dead thirty-six hours from natural causes. Mrs, Rohan was found leaning over the side of her bed, as though she had tried to reach a small table on which there was some medicine. pate conta CLOTHES FOR CIRCUS GIRL. Stoid erson Shock Seen im New York. Although the platures seem not to have been objeqged to in New York and | Brooklyn, where the clrous has ibeen showing, Chief of Police Bimson, acting Posters board Censors, has caused one of th ey ak |pictured ladies of the Barnumel: So|gregation to don nice white blankets of in the afternoon when the ctdldren | paper, The Chief has ordered the eisai concern to appear before the Recorder and excuse itself or be fined for display- Ing #0 much ofthe’ picture as to shock atald Paterson. Paterson, N. J., Board of Bill- | { | exeoutive committee vice Reform letter to the Mayor, to-day, on the sub- Jeot of the organization of the Bureau of Fire Prevention whtoh Mr, Ordway reiterates that political fluences solely prompted the seventy odd appointments to adds that the association which he re ack the Mayor but the City's Executive wishes to accept the responsibility for the political or- ganization of the bureau, Mr. Ordway “that is your act and the public to place the blam of which wei ertticises, resents did not att adds, SATURDAY, T TALKS |Family of Seven, Supported on $8.10 a Week, |[AFI, SMILE GONE, OF BOSSES ON HIS. | Reasonably Healthy, Happy and Not in Debt * BAY STATE SWING FLING AT MAYOR FOR TART LETTER Head of Reformers Asks Gay- nor If He Is Responsible - for Fire Appointments, Samuel IH. Ordway, of the Association, know where ‘The letter, cop ivi the bureau, chairman of the er SHer- in a wecond in- Sir: We aro in recetpt of your letter of the 4th inst., which does not seem to us to meet the iasue, The reputa- n of this association is not at issue, ut the conduct of one of the great departments of your administration Tt was perfectly obvious that the evidence we presented dealt with the ointments made to the Fire Pre- tion Bureau not as those of Dem- ocrats or Republicans, Socialists or Independence Leaguers, but as pollt- ical appointments in violation of law, and on this vital point you avoid the issue. “We did not attack this ety or present any ehi intimations against him, but to ald him by pre’ lest opportunity the Mayor of sougit of a charge which has been publi his subordinate and ap- ting at the ear- ‘dence In wupport made that pointee, the Fire Commissioner, was organizing (this bureau on politica: lines in violation of law. If you wish to assume responsibility for this, that is your act, and the public will know where to place the blame. Are We to understand from your silence on the point at tssue that you admit that the appointments were divided among the political district leaders aud de- fend this practice Your Fire Qon metiod of selection o} is open to the cept political selection mingioner had every nto him that vate employer ex- Is it true, or 18 dt not true, that he adopted the one method that Our course in ot terial here. any ume t the law t p are ory support be upield. by li aw? ds imma- eady at that anized to This bureau was created as a result of the Asch fire horror and endowed with enormous <= —— (Saltash teh ia neo FATHER OF ESSEX ST, FAMILY ROME IN ESShy STREET ORDWAY TAKES ay APRIL RIOT IN THEATRE OVER PICTURE OF SINKING TITANIC Audience Smashed Chairs When Police of Bayonne Stopped Fake Exhibition. ‘The determination of Chief of Police John Yore of Bayonne, N, J., to prohfbit the exhibition of moving pictures pur- porting to show the sinking of the Ti- tanto and the rescue of her survivors brought about a disturbance last night in which three Bayonne moving picture shows were mobbed and several people were ‘hurt. Bayonne moving picture houses are now under police censorship and no further trouble is anticipated. The management of three Bayonne picture shows advertised that moving given jot the sinking of the Titante, to the press in advance af their receipt | Yore pronounced the proposed exhibition at the Mayor's office, is {9 part ax fol-|2 fake and forbade the exhibitions, low ! | i fre ese We ask that th 4 helpless whe | in factories and loft bulldings in this city should not be jeopardized to Yours _re- }alone and had to send for assistance. ‘their families and friends are making this an opportunity tour. Denver, pictures of the Titanic disaster would be own for the first time last night. Inas- ich a# no moving picture were taken Chief Inspector Reilly, Sergt, Smith and four patrolmen were sent out to en- force the order. The moving picture people were allowed to exhibit pictures showing the launching of the Titanic in Belfast and slides showing her from various aspects, but no pictures pearing on the wreck were thrown on the screen, ‘The audiences having been led to be- eve they were to see something #en- sational, uttered loud protests. Seats were torn loose in one theatre. The policemen assigned to the house were unable to for the disturbance | care There were no baie s. SHRINERS TRAVEL | WEST. ‘The Shriners of Wee Tample left Grand Central ‘fommtnnl this afternoon on @ speclal train en route to the annual meeting of the Imperial Counetl, * of the Mystic Shrine, Los | hear a7, 1012)’ SHOWS NEW SIDE AS FIGHTING MAN His: Outbursts:of Anger Catch the Audience, but Not His Bids for ‘Sympathy. GREAT'WRATH GENUIN But the Role ts Evidently Dis- tasteful to the President— Face Drawn and Hard. Sewen thousand Jerseymen stood on one another's feet In the Mirst Reg: ment Armory in Newark last night to the new Taft speak, Whether they liked the new Taft—the aggrieved Taft, who has come to the point of fighting back—aos well as they did the old Taft, the President must have known through the Promptings of an Horator'e-sense of hin grip on an audience before tm was half through his speech. Those Jerseymen have tlocked in times past to banquets, where canary birds chirped in cages all around the heads Of the diners, there to stand and eheer when the broad smile of the nation's Executive came through the door into the banquet hall, They have heard this Executive joke, followed him indulgently through the mazes of the wool schedu and sung “For ho's a Jolly good fello’ when It came time for him to go, Hut not that Taft was he who stood bofore those seven thousand last night and said with the shake of parston in hin volee: “I'm forced against the wall—with my back to tt and I'm bound, if 1 have any manhood, to fight.” All knew they were witnessing great wrath of a man slow to anger, It tm easy to understand what © rought the outpouring in the rain to the gineered last night. No one hos ever speculated, publicly at lea what Pythias would have done {f Damon had suddenly hit him with a brick y philosopher ever reconstructed the ene that would have followed the blackjacking of Aaron on some Egyptian night by Moses, his patron and the law- giver who steam-rollered him into the leadership of Israel. Because a modern Damon has shied the political brick off the head of Pythias, and Aaron finds himself beset by a Moses who wants hin job back, even Jerseymen are eager to watch t! Itant phenomenon. ANGRY OUTBURSTS AND AP. | PEAL8 FOR SYMPATHY. Without the shadow of a doubt every man and woman in that armory went there in the bellef that they would the sage of Sagamore Hill torn to rag! They did not. Some of them began to leave the hall before the President was half through his speech. Theso had stayed long enough to catch President Taft in two remarkable outbursts of genuine anger when his whole face was alight for an instant with a flame of passion and his voice was shrill and cracked with the stress of the rage that was in the heart of the speaker, But people began to go when the President dropped invective and started to appeal to the sympathies of hia hearers, When he recited this and that violation of friendship of which he eon- sidered Col. Roosevelt guilty and thea queried, “Is this fair play? the aud!- ence cheered, but it did not stamp and yell President Taft was fortunate in hav- ing Job Hedges as the emoother of tho way. Hedges came up to form and tuned the great audience up to what was to come by taking sarcastic slaps at the great man of Oyster Bay in his characteristic growling, explosive deliv- ery. When he made the first mention of the Colonel's name there was a strong outburst of cheering that was significant of the approach of the Presi. dential preference primaries over in Jersey, due May 2. During all of Hedges's sallies of wit, which had the entire armory in an up- roar of laughter, the President sat in hia chair tehind Hedges's back with a very sober face. He @id not smile nor «ive any sign of approval. The audi- ence began to call for Taft before Hedges had finished, and finally the Executive stepped forward to begin his speech. SMILE 16 OFF, NOT A TRACE OF IT LEFT. Tt waa & very tired, very sedate face which those !n the armory saw. A solemn cast was given to the features by the tightly drawn mouth and the the shadow of @ smile—that “smile which won't come off''—beneath the mustache. People nudged one another and whis- ‘t he look changed?’ 1 true that not ten hours before President Taft had attended the funeral The Popular ‘Spring seles. The Nobles of Mecea Temple for an extensive ‘On the trip the party will stap at Colorado Springs, Salt serite Valley and San fg ning by way of an ran | the Canadian Rockies, The party {# traveling under the escort of Joble J. P. McCann, Caravan Director. ‘There are 120 Nobles and friends tn the party. powers to compel the 4 meet political exigencies. specttully, SAMUEL H, ORDWAY, : Blood Ren A ANS Blood & Stomach Cleaning Can TRARTOLA is a peppermint candy | blood urifier and laxative, easy. pleas acts gently and thoroughly | without Pain or griping, or in any way Of Major-Gen. Frederick Dent Grant. “The Presidency of the United @tates is @ Great office,” Taft bewan after pay- ing a Httle compliment to Hedges, “to which many have aspired, Many who have aspired and who have not reached that office nave no’ realized the other side of the picture and have nad Lmtd that it ptesents great and sometimes great agony of viru A great hush had fallen over the whole hall at the President's first words and hie votee, full and strong, carried to the fartheat recesess. Yot in the quality of Dis voice there was something dragging, something that seemed heavy and with- out vitality, He spoke ae if It were uns der compulsion and only through severe mentar disct “I do not know that any man aa ing mo tn that office has been tried as T have been tricd,”” he continued. Then acknowledging the debt of gratitude he owed to Roorevelt in helping him te the Presidency came the first of Taft's sud- den outbursts of anger. Lt was start. ling in Its suddenness, almost terrifying In the Intensity of ‘emoticn displayed. * He paused Cor an Instant and then he) Retained Only Enough to Keep , A both fists high above hie hed, Im face turned.acariet and he shouted: Fron Want When He. Went FIRST OUTBURST OF ANGER ‘ BRINGS APPLAUS to Sanitarium. Hut when Theodore Roos MAN WHO GAVE $6,000,000 ANAY DIES POOR POOR AT 92 Dr. Daniel vai “Kee Pearsons, Philanthropist, Devoted Fer- tune to Poor Colleges. SOLD EVEN HIS HOME. It work- ed to make me Prosident he worked | recomend to Pre f el bi Pecveons, aged 93 speoker's meaning, which cannot] DF. Pantet Kimbal chin Re show In flat type but which wag ap-| "ears ont, who In recent years ave Parent in the » pur on tre! more than %4,000,00 to small colleges, fy in the midday weet, dled easly to-day In a sanitarium at Hinsdale, Hh, ° ratively a poor man, Pnowmenta with complications lie to elt ago followed clowely (he words] oaueed deat ent and Who coull keep ' Jo te talline xing thelr eyes on his taco from a near] MOF several dave he inten vantage point could see teat ce was,’ Patent In an ins y one 4 laboring under a severe strain, It was] Malntatved himself on ay me of Apparent that he 155,000 a year paid him by a coltege to welt had ht which he had contributed oon the f his abiiity ndition that he would hoe pleased in hit capacity aso private] per cert of that amount citizen and how strong was the cul of of hie lite, He by: for the maintenance needy colleges tn 188) and ntial dignity, ‘Taft cont sums ran from 810,000 ty $406, f nabs aa tacome au Mfete keep “haat not a dignified thing for a Pr indulge In personalities and 1 frained for tong from He sold ile home to go to ‘The valve of the home wat ave te that thing, | te santtarinen, attacked | and van endowment were given for a falling, | pe to Hines garde | bora in Bradferé, and misrepresent what 1 longer rematn alent, Tam forced | 4s $12 inet the wall with my baci ty and Tm bound if T have any manhood |* 1 to eht.” fur That evoked the grentent cheers of the whole speech, . Tt cout) V2, and began practising medicine in ing to Iinots in 1857 he made tune In baying and selling Ulinele tan He was a Chicago alde ofiman la IST Tile first notable gift was Ww Relolt College, to which he salvo The cheers | began almost Lefore Presitent Taft had finished the sentence and he mopped! Most of Dr. iona's gifta were on his forehead with hts hindkershiet) condition that an amount equal to his widle they continued, When he spoke | s ovided by others, t his back being againat the wall rich colleges will my Ald so with a flery violence that sent Yas he often #aid, ‘Only’ the poor money,” Me volce booming away out to Jay/ones, the obscure strugaling ones up in treet tie mountains or out in the woods, oe Where the boy oF girl living outyet me a ” where may get an education.” SCARE”. BULLET KILLED. | Other’ Bie’ donations, by him Tho jury in.the triat ot George Bens, | Ciicaxo 1 of Rrooklyn, befgre Justice Putnam in| Mount i the Supreme Court, Long Inland City, | Foret ft on a charge of murdering his fourtean-| toraa Col year-old stepdaughter, Bertha Rotnan. | ono; Whitinan whom he killed with @ bullet intended! for her mother, Jan, 1, -wi!l get. the| case before Aight. The lawzers summed) po spac aceon an vy ip to-day and Judge Putnam charged the Jury at onc Bena's defens THE MAKERS of Queen Quality. Shoes have proved that the satin mousseline and beads which one sees so charmingly embodied in the elaborate costume may be employed with equally charming elfect in dainty ane and slippers. ALL OF THESE matertate and many others are being called into requie sition in making the fashionable foot- wear of the moment... SATIN APPEARS in slippers; 30,000. i that he was drunk/ wh and tried to boys toned Sandy Mia ; him, ‘ Hien ate soar S. tyle Notes by Madame Louise {disturbing the 1 the natural functions of the organs. 50c or $1 boxes at all Ril uM She | Stores and at many | other good drug stores, mousseline is crumpled into bewitching little knots to adorn them. Beads ‘ppear in innumerable ways as em- . broidery and as buckles. IMPORTANT STYLE _ tenden- i le fads and fancies, all receive eir are of attention at the Queen Quality Boot Shop, STYLES COME onl ein but there is never a ‘moment when Queen Quality Shoes lack their famous plia- bility. This is characteristic of these favorite women's shoes, One’ grows to expect it as a foregone conclusion, just as one does very moderate prices. And one is never disappointed. PRICES range from 83.50 to 85,00. Do its Duty Nise times in ten when the liver ie right the * @emach and bowels are right, CARTER'S LIVER PILLS ‘but fire Partai ~Cures Com, cin World Wants Work Wonders, 4

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