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Little Bobbie’s
Pa
^ TTJ E7 HTDIDI U "TTIT .> A Story for Baseball Fans That Will Interest ^
1 1 Ilk 1 lvll J if k 1 IT 4 Every Lover of the National Game ^
S Natural History Lessons S
No. 2—The Lamb
SYNOPSIS.
wMi lo * mvo done with it.
"Do you own thD oar.” h^ asked.
By Dorothy Dix
P A was kind of grouchy last nlt«*
Ma & me knew he was going to
be grouchy, beekaus sum old
friends of Ma was going to visit us for
a few days & they was to cum last nlte,
ail the way from Colfax, Wisconsin.
I doant like to be a killjoy, sed Pa, &
1 will do my best to treet Mister A-
Missus Bing all rite, but you know as
w#ll as 1 do w'hat It will be. Both of
them will want to be took to all of the
leading points of Interest, such as the
hoem of the widow wich entertained
G tor git Washington onst A the museum
of art & tht points of historical interest
outsids of those wich I have just inen-
shuned. After I have dragged them &
>ou A llttel Bobble all oaver the town
for a few days, showing them a lot of
stuff that I doant care a rap to »te, they
will say goodbye A tell us to be sure &
cum to Colfax &. stay a month That
Is sum Invitashun. Issent It? sed Pa—
cum to Colfax A stay a month. It (
sounds like cum to Ping Sing A stay
thirty years.
Pa Gets Their Name Wrong.
Well, thay are my frends, anyway, sed
Mi. A T want you to be nice to them. A
pJiase remember, sed Ma. that thare
naim isept Bing, thare name is Ging
G-I-I-N-G, Ma sed. with the accent on
the two Gs.
Wen Mister A Missus Ging calm thay
didn’t look as if they was happy at
all.
I am glad to bid you both welcome to
our home, sed Pa I have offen heard ‘
my wife speek of her dear friends the
PS tigs
Ging. sed Mister Ging G-I-N-O
That doesn't sound like a vary hard
nalm to reemember. h«; sed. He looked
at Pa kind of cross A Pa handed the
look rite beck to him.
What do you think of Atlanta, deer?
said Ma to Missus Git|
I think it is perfe» klv beestly. sed
Missus Ging We had to ride in that I
horrid trolley all the way from the depot
te hsre. A 1 had to stand up 1 wanted
Mister Gtng to malk a gentelman give
me his seat, but you know how husbands
are. He sed that perhaps the poor man
was Hred. Think of it. and fancy me.
a Ging. having to stand up in a com
mon street car Wl^y, at home we have
our own carriage
If It Is anything like the carriages I
used to see in Colfax wen I wan court
1ng you, Pa sed to Ma. 1 am afrade Mis
ter A Missus Wing wuddent have
reached our hoam till to-morrow mom
nig Colfax waa noted for Its prltty
gurls and Its saddle backed skates sed
Pa Thare waa only one hansum horse
In the town, A nobody cud drive It.
T beg your pardon, sir, sed Mister Ging
There are sum magnificent horsen in
Colfax. I have two roans that I wuddent
sell for a thousand dollars.
T wuddent give a thousand cents for
Diem, sed Pa Thare lstn’t any class to
a roan horse “Who evvet* heard of a
roan horse stepping out A winning the 1
Brooklyn Handicap? sed Pa.
Never mind. iU*erest, Ma sed In Pi I
am sure Mister A MUhuh Ging will get
to love Atlanta after they have had a
chanst to git around. Thare. is so much [
of interest to see here, A the shops arc
very butlful now The windows are Jest (
full of hargans.
Missus Ging Is Put Out.
The windows can stay full of hargans.
sed Mister Ging 1 toald iny wife bee- j
foar we left hoani that the stores In
Colfax was pie** A good enufr for her
mother before bar and plenty good enufr
for her Thare is going to be no ex
travagance on this trip. Hcvlngs de
liver me. sed Mister CHng, from a shop
ping A bargan hunting woman I wish
you would show us our room, he sed to
Ma. My wife & 1 are vary tired. I sup
pose you have breakfast at seven, be
sed.
Oh, deer no. sed Ma We have break
fast at nine.
Oh. well, »ed Missus Ging 1 suppose
my husband & 1 can go out to a reste-
rant. Do you know a good cheap place
ntre here'* site asked Pa.
Yea. sed Pa. 1 know a good cheep
piece. They have rooms thare too.
Gordon Kelly, a young North Geor
gia mountaineer, comes to Atlanta
to get a pla«e with Rilly Smith’s
< ’rackers It is raining when he
reaches Ponce DeLeon and be is
nearly run over by an auto, in which
ar. two persons a man and a young
girl. The driver of the car is an ar
rogant fellow The glr! makes him
stop the machine. Mite gets out and
inquires If Kelly is injured She
apologizes , for her companion’s
brusque inAnner Kelly sees Mana
ger Smith aiu te’ls him he'has never
played a game of ball. Smith con
s' tits to tiive Kellv a trial. The girl
in the auto is Mildred Deery, daugh
ter of Galen Deery, a crafty and
wealthy speculator in timber lands
Her companion Is Forrest Cain, a
rich young man about town. Kelly
owns timber land that Deery would
like to possess.
Now go on with the story.
By A. H C. MITCHELL.
Copyright, 1!>13, by International News
Service.
TO- D A Y ’S IX ST ALLM K N T
Gain had no definite idea in view
except to drive a considerable distance
out of town and have it out with this
stranger. Hitherto his money had en
abled him to have his way in every
thing and he had ridden roughshod
over every obstacle that presented
itself in his path, so that the Idea
that he wat a sort of demi-god had
become firmly implanted in his na
ture. In the ca9e In hand he did not
stop to realize that his money was
of little use to him. He was blind
with rage. He attributed his mis
understanding with Mildred to the
passenger in the back seat. Cain re
solved to eliminate this stranger from
his affairs He tried to get more
speed out of the car, but by this time
the roads were growing worse and
worse a.« they got further out of
town. They had passed the limit
of electric lights and exrent for the
rays of the powerful headlights every
thing was in inky darkness.
They must have driven all of half
an hour and were a good fifteen miles
from where they ytarted, when Cain,
spying a road that branched off to
the left, turned Into it. Up to this
point Gordon Kelly, in the back seat,
had made no movement whatever.
He might have been asleep, for all
Gain knew. But the car had not
traveled a furlong on the branch road
before he gave evidence that be was
very much awake.
With a spring as light as a panther
he vaulted over the back of the front
seat and landed lightly beside Gain.
Reaching down he switched off the
magneto, pulled out the plug and
dropped It Into his coat pocket. Al
most instantly the motor stopped and
the car came to a standstill
R
CHAPTER VIII
EAGHING down to the coil box.
Cain discoVefed the plug was not
there.
"Where's that plug "' he demanded,
fiercely.
"I have It In my pocket.” replied
Kelly, quietly. "Something is likely
to happen pretty quick, but as 1 don't
know just what It ie. 1 thought 1 would
be on the safe side, that's all.”
"Who are you?” cried Gain.
" I will tell you who I am. but first
I want to know if I am talking to a
crazy man. a fool, or a Joker." an
swered Kelly While he was speaking
he was fumbling In his pockets. He
now drew forth a match which he
held up to the other’s face. Gain blew
it out almoet as quickly as it ignited,
but Kelly had seen enough.
“Oh. you're the Decrys’ chauffeur,”
lie observed calmly. “You're the man
who nearly ran over me the other
day. Well, did your employer tell
you to dive me out here, or did you
do It on your own hook?”
"I’m not a chauffeur." exclaimed
Gain hotly, "Vm a friend of the Deery
family and, If you want to know. I
brought you here on mv own hook
What are you going to do about It?"
"You are certainly a queer sort.
What is your object? Is this a hold
up game?” Did you bring me out here
to rob me?"
"Rob you; no!" shouted Cain. "1
can buy and sell you a million times!”
The calmness of the man seated be
side him acted as a kind of reverse
English on Cain He had been angrv
all along, bist was now furolus and
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FOR SA LE BY
AI.L JACOBS’ STORES
AND DRUGGISTS GENERALLY.
"Yes, this is the garage—yes, Miss Deery—Yes, I understand—I’ll have a car around in five
minutes.”
gave every indication of losing con
trol of himself entirely.
" 1 can’t figure you out at all.” said
Kelly in an even voice. "I’m not much
used to city ways and I thought at
first you had been, ordered to take
me on a little drive, though it la a
mighty queer night for it. I stood
for It as long ar you stayed on the
main road, but when you turned off
here I thought It was time to quit.
Tell, me please, what this Is all about?
If you have been drinking, you ought
to be sober enough by now. If it’n a
joke I’ll take it as such and let it go
at that.”
Gain ignored the question.
"What were you doing in Deery’s
house to-night,” he snarled
"1 was invited there, but—”
"You're a liar!" screamed Gain,
making a movement as if to struggle
out of hl.v seat behind the wheel of
the automobile.
Just Chastisement.
As quick as the stroke of a cat
Kelly shot up hla right hand and his
lingers closed on Gain’s collar with
the strength of a vise With the same
movement he jerked Gain’s head down
to the floor of the car. He sent his
left foot crashing through the side
curtains* which had been fastened on
to exclude the rain, and thus clear
ing a passage, ns it were, lie Jumped
to the ground, dragging the strug
gling Gain after him like a sack of
meal, fain fell in the muddy road
with a splash. Still holding his man
by the collar. Kelly* ankle deep In
mud, hauled him around in front of
the car and deposited him there In
the full glare of the searchlights.
"Now we can see what we are
doing," he remarked and In spite of
the effort he had made to drag a
man of Gain's size, his respiration was
hardly above normal.
Gain scrambled to his feet and with
a vile epithet rushed at bis antagonist.
But Kelly, who had h reach like Bob
Fitzsimmons, simply put out one hand
and Gain ran blindly into it and
stopped abort. With one powerful
shove Kelly sent the other man reel
ing backward and. losing his balance.
Gain fell with another splash in the
mud. In two jumps Kelly stood over
him.
"There’* only one thing to do to a
man like you." he said "Get up."
Cain lay motionless, blinking up
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\ Y OU read the first five installments of the great baseball mystery
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$100 by working out the solution of the mystery as nearly as its au
thor. A. H. C. Mitchell, has done as you can.
Mr. Mitchell has w-rltten the last chapter, but his copy is sealed
up in a vault at the American National Bank. When all but this final
chapter has been printed, The Georgian readers will be asked to submit
to threo competent judges, none of them connected with this newspaper,
their version of what the gTand denouement snould be.
To the person who most closely approximates Mr. Mitch
ell's final chapter $100 will be awarded. Other prizes, making
the total prize list $250, also will be distributed.
Here is the list of the awards:
No. 1 $100
No. 2 $50
No. 3 $25
No. 4 $15
Nos. 5 to 16. each 5
Read this sixth installment of the great mystery story and you will
not need to be urged to read the succeeding chapters. The story will
grip you. As you read, try to follow the author’s channel of thought
and when the time comes for you to s't down and write that final
chapter, be ready to win one of the big cash prizes in The Georgian's
great offer.
“No.” .
"Who does own it?”
“The Davis Garage."
Kelly took the plug from his pocket,
Inserted it in the coil box and switch
ed on the spark.
"Crank it,” he ordered.
Without a word Cain gave the mo
tor a whirl and the machinery start
ed with a roar. Kelly jumped in
the driver's seat and, evidently sure
of every movement, eased in the re
versed gear and backed the car off
the road with a view of heading it
in the other direction. This accom
plished, he called Cain to the side
of the car and said:
Might Lose Temper.
"This may appear a childish act on
my part, but I’m going to leave you
here to find your way back to town
the best way you can. It will do you
good to think the whole matter over
carefully. I don’t know yet what
your object was In bringing me away
out here. Is there anything you
want to say to me?”
< 'ain made no answer.
"Very well,” continued Kelly, ”T will
probably be able to figure It out for
myself In the course of time. You
are evidently one of those rich young
fellows that have more money than
brains. I never met one before, but
I have read about them in newspa
pel’s. My name is Gordon Kelly and
I live at the Imperial Hotel. It js
possible that you will be seeking some
kind of revenge on me, but let me
warn you to leave me severely alone.
If you annoy me any further I am
liable to lose my temper and Lord
help you if anything like that comes
to pass.”
This may sound like heroics deliv
ered by a stage hero in a melodrama,
but aR a matter of fact Kelly spoke
calmly and seriously. It was simply
his way.
Waiting a moment longer and re
ceiving no response from Cain, Kelly
started the car and slowly plowed his
way through the mud to the main
road, where the going was much bet
ter, leaving Gain to shift for himself.
He drove carefully back to the city
and reached his hotel in about an
hour. Instead of stopping there,
however, he continued on three or
four blocks and slowed down next the
sidewalk In front of the Capital City
Club and left the car standing there.
Walking back to his hotel he went
to the desk and asked for his key.
He was splashed with mud from head
to foot and Clerk McClendon eyed
him suspiciously for a moment, but
as Kelly did not seem disposed to of
fer any explanation, he silently pass
ed over the room key.
When Kelly reached his room, he
went to the telephone, called up Davis*
garage and said;
"You remember sending a car to
Mr. Deery’s house about 9:30 to
night? Well, you will find the car
in front of the Capital City Club
and if you want to know anything
more about it you will have to see
the man you sent along as chauffeur
Good night.”
Gordon Kelly then peeled off his
mud-bespattered clothes, threw' them
on the floor of his bathroom, took a
bath, crawled between the bedsheets
and five minutes later was sleeping
the sleep of the just.
Who waa this young man from
the mountains who knew' all about
handling automobiles? How did he
acquire his calm manner? Where
did he gain that easy and confident
bearing? Whence came the breed
ing that enabled him to enter one of
the "best” houses in Atlanta and con
duct himself as though he had been
brought up in "society?”
* * *
Forrest Cain, chewing the bitter
cud of reflection, walked for more than
an hour in the direction of the city
before he got a lift. Then a friend
ly milkman came along and he rode
the rest of the way in. Going to
his room, he kicked the sleeping
George out of bed and made him
attend to his wants. Cain remained
in bed all next day. His trunks had
gone to New York and that night he
followed them to the metropolis.
To Be Continued Monday.
The Drawbacks
at Kelly as though he had just been
awakened from a bad dream.
"Get up.” ordered Kelly again.
But Cain refused to move so, reach
ing down Kelly inserted his fingers
in the collar of his foe and yanked
him to his feet. Then, turning him
around, and facing him up the road,
Kelly stepped back one pace and
delivered a solid kick in Cain’s nether
region.
There is nothing that^ will take the
fight out of a man sooner than a
weighty kick, placed where it will do
the most good. There is nothing so
humiliating to the recipient, nothing
so mortifying, so abasing. Such was
the effect on Cain. He started to run
up the road, but Kelly followed him
and executed a series of blows with
the foot, of astonishing power and
nocuvacy. At last, grabbing Cain by
the collar once more, he turned him
around and kicked him back to the
headlights.
Cain wag covered from head to foot
with the red mud of Georgia and
Kelly’s clothing was so splashed with
it that very little of the material
showed. The rain had practically
ceased and only a fine mist was fall
ing. Away off in the distance could
be seen the glow of the lights of At
lanta reflected above that city. The
rays of the powerful headlights fell
full on the two young men. It was
A Reward of Merit
A Complete Short Story
“IT
ERE comes Johnny!” ex
claimed Mrs. Jones, sighing
disconsolately. “He must
have been awfully good to-day—-for
he’s as dirty as a little pig. and he’s
an hour late!”
Her caller opened her eyes in
amazement. "Awfully good?" she re
peated "Why, when my Sammy
comes home late and is dirty I usually
know' that he’s been Into some sdrt of
mischief It’s never a sign of being
particularly good to my eyes "
"Well, your Sammy doesn’t go to
the same school,” returned Mrs.
Jones. "Johnny has a pretty and
stylish teacher, and. what’s more, she
knows how to make her pupils like
her. They all fight to do things for
tier! I learned all about it when I
went to call on her one day after
Johnny had brought home a perfect
report card. For a whole month he’d
been coming home late and looking
perfectly dreadful —you’d think he
way a street Arab. I have never been
able ■'» get anything out of him, ex
cept that he’d stayed after school to
clean the blackboards.
A Perfect Card.
that bell, he’s so anxious to get to
school in time to see that it Is done
right! And>as for my errands, he
finds it quite impossible to do them in
his limited time.”
He Was Late.
1 had
. stay*
h he was
J < • .
and I thi
that it would be a very poor one. since
he was kept In almost every single
evening.
"You can imagine my amazement
when Johnny brought home a perfect
card. Motherlike. I doubted his ve
racity. I even thought it was* not im
possible that he had doctored his card "What makes you so late?” she In
to show to us. So I put on my hat quired. as Johnny came in, brushing
and went to school to see his teacher. . . .
I thought Johnny was singularly un- ,he chalk dust frotn h,s sleeves -
concerned about it—but, then, you Johnny grinned happily, “I had 95
know, you can never tell about boys in geography and 100 in spelling—so
“Well, it seemed that Johnny’s she let me have all the boards to-
I teacher had had such a time trying night." he answered, triumphantly,
not to seem to play favorites that she “And last week Frank had the bell—
had adopted a system of rewards, and he came late, so she raid if l’d
The pupils are allowed to wash so come early to-morrow and he wasn't
many blackboards or beat out the there t could have it. Anyway, he
dust from so many erasers or raise cheats! And I’ve a good mind to tell
the windows so many times for cer- her!”
tain grades In their studies. "Will you run to—” began Mrs.
"But the choice reward is ringing Jones, hut Johnny interrupted her as
the belt. 1 do wish Johnny was **..4“*"?? t .
bright enough always to ring the bell . ” bu D u , at wal b, 1 ve 2°
-or else dull enough just to open the Darns "aiting out here!"
windows or pass papers. But Ivs’s ot A "i; T °V ’ , , ..
that intermediate brightness that r, - „ "J . ® , ,y8ten1 ’
wards him with blackboard cleaning. de ‘ l “ r * d ? r l, Jon f s ’ env ' ou ’' ,y ’ ,
i Ho s, ,»ffs at the w indows and pap, rs. th “ To' 1 '®’ ? ean
but he’s had the he,. onK a few
nw ii angel | had settled on the rug. "Maybe if
it* the i »■. - j "Johnny w ill get up early, eat * you tell him it’s a reward?"
ht I would I cold breakfast and hardly allow me But Mrs. Jones smiled and shook
him when I to see that h* is properly washed | her head. "I’m not a teacher!" she
s confident when he has the privilege of ringing replied.
“H‘
OUSE HUNTING,” said the
man who is boarding with the
Pikers until he can get a
home and bring his wife and children to
town, “is the worst and most depressing
job that any man or woman ever had
to tackle.
"You can never find a house anywhere
that has not some terrible drawback,”
he went on. "You can take your choice
between a poor house in a good neigh
borhood and a good house in a poor
neighborhood.
"If you have a good house in a poor
neighborhood your little Cedric and
Kenneth and Quentin will be contami
nated by contact with those common
Awfulwaffle children and the horrid
young Beansisales. And if you take a
poor house in a good neighborhood your
children will hang wistfully upon the
fence and watch the haughty Stalkswag-
gers children, exclusive young Many-
brldges and the stuck-up little Snippy»
doodles at play.
"If a house is perfect in every other
respect the landlord will live too near.
You are not at first suspicious of the
fact that there is a handy little gate by
which he can enter your back yard. At
first he is just helping you move in.
But after you are settled you find him
on the premises every time you come
home from anywhere.
"Next you note with concern that he
and his wife are exceedingly familiar
with the history of all the people who
have occupied the premises before you.
And presently you begin to realize that
your idiosyncrasies will furnish consid
erable data for the edification of your
successor.
"Every time you find the landlord at
your house he is there merely in the
capacity of a friend. He was afraid the
cat was caught in the fly-paper or that
the canary had escaped, or that mice
had got in the piano. He just come to
see that everything was as it should he
You are glad to find that you have such
i solicitous friend who is always looking
ifter your interests.
"But when you come home suddenly
some day and find him taking a bath in
your bath room his disinterested mo
tives are not so clear. You become dis-
atisfled and begin getting ready to
HERE are few
more valuable
animals than the
Lamb, whether
you consider it
from the mint
sauce or the
Wall Street point
of view. In
either capacity
It is our meat,
and f u r n 1 shes
glad raiment and
diamonds to
those who, but
for it, would not
slain a dozen take its place. Indeed,
against the cold blasts of Winter.
The name of the individual who
discovered the first Lamb is lost in
the mists of antiquity, but as a Bource
of supplies he has got the Individual
who made two blades of grass grow
where only one grew before beat a
city block. Thus are we called upon
again to marvel at the wisdom of a
beneficent Providence that has creat
ed Just the proper thing to meet our
every need.
Lambs are found in all parts of the
known world, and appear to multiply
with great rapidity, so that as one is
slain a dozen take its place. Indeed
the theory is held on Wall Street that
a new b*.teh of Lambs im born every
second, but this probably exaggerates
the situation. At any rate, the Lamb
crop for the last year or two has been
so poor that many brokers have been
forced to prey on one another.
In appearance the Lamb Is of a mild
and pleasing aspect with a voice that
sounds like the amateur soloist who
kindly consents to sing at a club din
ner. Originally the Lamb is of a
snow white color, but after a short
sojourn away from its native haunts
It is apt to need a hurry trip to the
laundry. It gets soiled very quickly.
In the matter o' gp
legs the Lamb is
eclectic, some
Lambs having
four, one located
on each corner,
while other Lambs
have only two,
which are situated
at the extreme
northeast end of
their anatomy,
thus enabling
them to stand up
right after the
manner of men
Also, some Lambs have alfalfa on
their chins, while others have smooth
faces, but this difference depends on
whether they came from the middle
West or not.
We may dismiss the quadruped
Lamb In a few words, merely stating,
in passing, that it has of late devel
oped an ambitious and aspiring ten
dency to rise skyward under the tui
tion of Messrs. Armour and Swift, and
that it has shown a coy disposition to
stay in cold storage that every one
who has the good of the country at
heart must deplore- However, that
great veterinarian Professor Wilson,
late of Princeton University, we un
derstand, has now
underta ken the
moral regenera
tion of the Lamb,
and eke the beef,
and the pig, and
we may hope te
see some needed
reforms instituted
in this line.
It is in the two-
legged Lamb (ge
nus surkibus) that
j the trained nat
uralist finds hit
most interesting
study.
This amiable creature lives apparent
ly only to give pleasure to others,
which it does by the simple expedient
qf suffering itself to be sheared by
any artistic trimmer that happens
along.
This is great sport, and it Is a mat
ter of pride that our Wall Street
brokers hold the world’s record as
the champion fleecers of Lambs.
Being so gentle and kind, the Lamb,
especially the woolly ones from Pitts
burgh, are held in great esteem by
women as pets. There was once a
chorus girl named Mary who had a
little Lamb, with a fleece as white
as snow, and everywhere that Mary
went hls money
did surely go—but
that’s another
story.
Lambs are gen
erally of the mas
culine persuasion,
though occasional
ly we observe an
elderly female
mutton dressed as ^
Spring Lamb ca
pering around at
th6 danaant.
There are many
ourious sights in
nature, and this is
ono of the curiousest.
Not What He Meant.
Jones and Long had not met for
| years. Once—that is. in the days
when both had been striving for
fame in their different professions—
] they had been really good chums, and
j many a talk had they enjoyed to
gether by the fireside as to the little
■ Places they would take in tho coun-
! try "when their ships came home.”
The dream of Jones has been real
ized, and now. although a portly old
fellow, it was with a sense of real
pleasure that he prepared for a visit
from his former friend.
"Ah, it’s splendid seeing you down
here. Long!” he said cordially, by way
of greeting. "Quite like old times—
what? And the missus, I know, Is
longing to shake you by the hand
But first—yes, you must come along
and have a look at my greenhouse.
You simply must!”
And Long went.
"Well, Jones,” he said, “you’ve got
a mighty pretty place down here; but,
to my mind, it’s Just a bit bare.”
“Oh,” replied Jones cheerfully, "that’s
because the trees are so yoyngl Next
time you come—why, the/'ll be so
big that you won’t recognize them! 0
There is a large missionary school in
Tokio where the teaching is given in
English. One of the pupils not long ago
wrote a composition on England, from
which these are extracts:
"The England which occupied of the
largest and greatest dominion which
rarely can be. The Englishman always
works with very powerful hands and
the long legs, and even the emmenced
mind and his chin is so strong as de
serves iron. Being spread out from
Europe to Australia to America his (
minion is dreadfully extensive, so tl
his countrymen boastfully Rays, ”3
sun are never set on our dominion.’ 1
testimony of England say that Tie tl
lost the common sense, he never h
any benefit, though he has gained
complete world.’ The English are
ning mention to establish a great Emp
of the Paradise. As the Englishmen
ways confide the object of the pure a
the order to be holy, and the repros
him if any of them arc killed to de£
with the contention of other men!”
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MACARONI
is strengthening, too. A 10c package contains more nutri
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At all grocers’—
5c and 10c
packages.
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