USA > Massachusetts > Norfolk County > Franklin > Franklin Sentinel newspaper, 1900 > Part 23
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The look of satislection In a woman's fucc is the best recommendation ol
Opening of The Florida Season. "The placing in service of "The New York and Floridn Limited" of the South eru railway, the handanmest traiu in the world, always siguttiex the opening of the Florida sncial season. This superb traiu left New York no its initial trip for the season nif 1900 Tuesday, Jan. 10. at 12 40 p m . and will rou daily, except Sunday, thionghout the season, reaching St Augustine al 3 35 the next aftetion The main is composed exclusively of compartment cars, finished in royal ele- Kauce; Pullman drawing room sleeping cars, constructed expecially for this train, a sumptous dining car and library and observation cars It inus through aund lo St. Augustine except une drawing room sleeping car, which is detached at Columbia, & C, nud runs Through to Aikin and Augusta for the convenience of travelers to these popular resorts. One can is also detached at Jacksonville and runs through to Tampa and Port Tampa, on the west coast, where direct connection is made with Plant Line What Do the Children Drink? Don't give thent tea or coffee. Have yon tried the new food drink called Grain-O? It is delleions and nonrishing steamships for Key West and Havana, "The New York and Florida Limited" affords passengers the must delightful way of reaching Florida resorts ntaler conditions of the greatest comfort and fand takes the place of coffee. The more speed, and it is universally acknowledged | Grain O) you give the children the more that it illustrates, more than any other health you distribute through their sys- tema. Graiu-O Is made of pure grains, and when properly prepured tastes like the choice grades of coffee, but costs about one-fourth as inuch, All grocers well it; 15c. and 250 train in the world, the wonderful devel opment which has been made in cun struction and eleganer in railroad equip ment. In addition to the "New York And Florida Limited" the Southern rail. way also operates two other daily trains to Florida One of these, the "[', S. Fast Mail,". leaves New York at 12 10 a. m. every day in the week This train carrles Pullman drawing room sleeping cars through to Jackmimville, St. Augustine and Mlami, connecting with steamer fur; headache, stomach tronhles, teething
51
SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO., CHICACO
NEW METNE ORGAN
3
20 00 33 00
THE SENTINEL, FRIDAY EVENING, JAN. 19, 1900.
9 00 DROPS
CASTORIA
AVegetable Preparation for As- similating the Food and Regula- ting the Stomachs and Bowels of
INFANTS . CHILDREN
Promotes Digestion,Cheerful- ness and Rest.Contains neither Opium, Morphine nor Mineral. NOT NARCOTIC.
Recipe of Old Dr.SAMUEL PITCHER
Pumpkin Seed. Alx. Senna . Rochelle Salts - Anise Serd . Appermunt - Bi Carbonat Sada + ma Sctd - Clothed Sugar +
1
A perfect Remedy for Constipa- lion, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoca, Worms,Convulsions, Feverish- ness and LOSS OF SLEEP.
Fac Simile Signature of Chauff Fletcher. NEW YORK.
35 DOSES 35 CENTS
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER.
CASTORIA For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the Signature of
Chart, Fletcher.
The Kind You Have Always Bought. CASTORIA
THE CENTAUR COMPANY. NEW YORK SITY
The Return of the Volunteers, Oh! oll the flags are flying. And all the drums ure beating. The alr is full of color, And rings with happy gre-ling. As the soldier boys come marching, Through the old famllar places. God help us, who in silence Hide our pallid, grief- worn faces. He knows we thank and bless Hlm. For those we see returning. And' none but He can measure The heart-break and the yearning. For feet that went full gladly. And llps that smiled in going. Elow lonely Is their slumber. When soft sea-winds are blowing.
Our eyes are dark with sorrow, We see the ranks but blindly: If we cannot lift our voices Still think upon us kindly. None give you greater honor, O men, by outward token. Than we who sit in silence That never shall be broken. A. E. Woodworth, in Chicago Ad. Fance,
By the Patter of His Feet. I can tell my Ilttle boy By the palter of bis feet. Whether in the bare old kitchen. Or upon the village street. I can tell the restless footfall Just wherever It may be, Whether wlih a dozen urchins, Or with only two or three.
I know not how I know It. That is hidden e'en from me, So I cannot tell to others The sweet little mystery- Like the secret of the sunlight. Shining on the happy earth. Like the secret of dear child1.cod Fiked with artless gentle mirth. Shall 1 know my precious boy Dr the stepping of hi f 1. After years have left thelr sunlight On his falr and man'y week? May h's footfall have the irusle Of the holy days of youth. May my boy walk forever In the way of right and truth. -M. A. Holt, In N. Y Observer.
The Grent Sailing Rnee. We are salling. we know not .whither, Into the great Somewhere. And we have no charts of The dangers That loom or are hidden there; And some of us lag or hurry. And some of us only worry. And some of us never care.
We are salling on life's broad ocean. And each has his little bark. And here and there Is a saflor Who steers by some stendfast mark; And many a rudder is never At any service whalever. In the daylight or the dark.
We are going, we know uol whither. And some of us trim our salls For all the changes of weather,
For calms or fair winds or gales.
And here and there is one lagging. Whose canvas Is ragged and sagging, And he is the one who falls, S. E. Kiser, In Chicago Times-Herald.
You May Need Pain-Killer
For ACCIDENTS
Cuts
Burns Brulses Wounds, &c., &c.
It gives instant relief and cures quickly.
In case of sudden illness
Cramps Diarrhea Dysontory and All Bowel Complaints
it is a sure, sofa and quick remedy. There's ONLY ONE
Pain Killer
Perry Davis'
Two sizen, 25c. and Kne. Sumide bootile ENElled
(Meution this pajiets,
ALL DRUSGISTS.
July
ROAD IMPROVEMENT. 1
NOTES ON DRIVING.
A Four-Horse and a Three-Horse Ilteb Described and Illus- trated by an Expert.
Many and various are the methods of driving horses with the three and four-horse lines. The arrangement shown in Fig. 1 is the only true way to drive four horses abreast with two lines, and after using them once a per-
But
Bit
Figl
A FOUR-HORSE HITCH.
son will not want to try any other way, as it gives a direct line on three of the horses' hits. Use the ordinary lines (ed) for the two inside horses, and long ran straps to connect the outside horses, as from a to b in illustration. Fasten the outside horse to the inside ones by means of a rope or strap, or
Bir
Bit
Fig. 2.
DRIVING THREE HORSES ABREAST, these may be fastened together in hame rings with halter straps, as the horses work best.
The correct way for using three horses with two lines is shown In Fig. 2. The lines proper should be used on the outside horses. The run straps are the same as in Fig. I, and are used by crossing over the withers of the middle horse and passing through the hame rings and fastening into the hits (a to b), as in Fig. 2 .- R. A. Osborn. in Farm and Home.
RURAL MAIL DELIVERY.
Univeranl Introduction of the Sys- tein Must Lead to the Construe- tion of Better Roads.
The Chicago Record in a recent issne gives an interesting resume of the op- eration of numerous free rural delivery routes in Montgomery county, Ind., a typical community of the middle west. It has demonstrated that all of them have been operated to the entire satis- faction of the Indiana people enjoying the convenience, and also of the post offire department. The Record's cor- respondent gives figures which suff- ciently vindicate the aclion of the de. partment. The rantes are about 30 miles long. During the first month of the de- livery each of the carriers delivered about 1,000 pieces of mail mutter; at the end of the thal yeur they were deliv. ering more than 5,000 pierre nt month. During the first three months they would euch colleet from wight to len letters daily; now they collect 50 to 60 daily, besides mony packages. Farts are cited to show the many improve. ments that have come about, and the
three most significant are those which show the concrete fact that farms have ralsed in value, the department is re- celving a net profit of $40 per month and that the convenience has stim- lated the bøfiding of two new macadam. ized reads to induce the government tu these establish inore routes. With roads and without the free delivery sys. tem has come a greater value to the farms lying nlong thrin than has come to those with free delivery und poor roads, and the net result has been a larger and more vital interest in the movement that was first inaugurated by the League of American Wheelmen. It will only be a matter of time, and a comparatively short time at that, when the motor vehicle will assume large proportions in this montter of free rural mail delivery. Already the hi- cycle has become the one grrat feature. but in the system necessarily in vogue and that will be greatly extended in its operation and in its mileage its value must needs have its limitations heranse of the carrying capacity of the machine and the milenge ability of the letter carrier.
Territory having good roads and free delivery will show so marked an in- crease in land values over adjacent see- tions that have not these signs of prog- ress and prosperity that the local fa- thers will have before them selfish in durements to advance the cause that The wheelmen have so long and unselfish- ly fought for. It would be strictly within reason and should not be he- yond the province of the postal de part- ment to make it a sine qua non that to be without roads would mean tu he withont free delivery. I'nder such con- ditions inniters would soon assine a shape that would promise the grid- ironing of the country with roads in place of muck ludes. When this comes about motorists will cujes every ad- vantage that could it wished fur, and from so simple n thing : & # postage stamp would come a large imperins lee the newest of industries. ( leveland Cycling Gazette.
No Right to Ugliness.
The woman who is lovely in face, form and temper will always have friends, but uue who would be attractive must keep ber health. If she is weak, sickiy and all ruu down she will be nervous and irri table. If she has constipation or kidney trouble her impure blood will cause pim- pies, blotches, skin eruptions a wretched complexiou. Electric Bitters is the best medicine in the world to regu- late stomach, liver and kidneys and to purify the blood. It gives strong nerves. bright eyes, smouth, velvet skin, rich complexion. It will make a good look- ing, charmning woman of a run-down in- valid. Only 50c. at A. C. Mason & Co.'s drug store.
Freynent Changes. Bill-How often do they change nap- kins at your boarding house? Jill-Why, I think I get some other fellow's every meal .- Yonkers States- man.
Denuty In Blood Deep.
Clean blood means a clean skin. beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar- tie clean your blood and keep it clean, hy stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im purities from the body, Begin to day to bamsh pimples, hoils, blotches, blackheads, and that sickly hilions complexion hy taking Cascarets, -beanty for ten cents. All drug- gists, satisfaction guaranteed. 10c, 25c. 50c
Properly Located.
"That deal you have just engineered will be quite a feather in your cap." "A feather in my cap!" echoed the financier. "It will be a whole bunch of feathers in my wife's hat."-Washing. ton Star
Help ... Nature
Babies and children need ¿ proper food, rarely ever medi- # cine, If they do not thrive on their food something is j wrong. They need a little help to get their digestive machinery working properly. -H-
SCOTT'S EMULSION OF COD LIVER OIL WITH HYPOPHOSPHITES OF LIME & SODA
will generally correct this difficulty.
If you will put from one- fourth to half a teaspoonful imababy's bottle three or four times a day you will soon see a marked improvement. For larger children, from half to a teaspoonful, according to age, dissolved in their milk, if you so desire, will very soon show its great nourish- ing power. If the mother's # milk does not nourish the baby, she needs the emul- sion. It will show an effect at once both upon mother and child.
Soc. and $1.00. all druggists. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, New York
Jast Singlag When clouds threw shadows o'er the aky, And all the world seemed like a sigh, He found a ray of sunshine by Just singing!
Not that his heart was happy-nol But, Ike a river in Its flow.
The music ever made it so- Just slaglug!
And checks forgot the falling tear. And souls In valleys dim drew neuf- Crept to him In the dark to hear That singing!
It led from grief, and gloom, and loxs- It ied from stas where billows tos8, To light, Mumining the cross- That singing!
Sing! Sing! When sound the stormy knets, ! When bigh the darkening tempest swalla; Sine! Sing! and hear the harbor- bells Just inging! -Atlanta Constical'ar,
A Morning Prayer.
Let me to-day do something that shsil take A little sadness from the world's vast store,
And may 1 be so favored as to make Of joy's too scanty sum a little more.
Let me not hurt, by any selfish deed Or thoughtless word, the heart of foe of friend:
Nor would 1 pasa, unseeing, worthy need. Or sin by silence where I would defend. However meager be my worldly wealth, Let me give something that asall ald iny kled. A word of courage, or a thought of health, Dropped as I pass for troubled heurts to IInd
Let me to-night look back : cross the spat 'Twixt dawn and dark, and to my con Brlence say-
Because of some good act lo beast or man- "The world .s better that I lived to-day. " -Ella Wheeler Wilcox. In Youth's L'om panion.
A Little Word, She smiled upon him when they met, He said a little word or iwo, The sun In gold n glory sel, She miled upon him wher thy met. Thai night they parte ! with rearet. What wondrous thing a word will do! ! wluck couvert fond into nourishment She smiled upon him when th y met. He said a little word or two
But he had sald her balr was red- In truth il was an aubura Fue- A gossip told! Her passion fled! Once he had sald her hair was red, The happiness he had is dead- Ab, what a little word will do! Once he had said her hair' was red, In truth hi was of auburn hue S. E. Kiser. In Chicago Times-Herald
Sine Die. As far as earth Is from the sky, So Lov+ 1s high
Where Alpine lakes their vigi's keep 1s Love more deep
In Nature There no boundaries are That tell how far Love goes,
Love's measure, as each countless star. God knows
One only thing we know: Love comes .C At y: Though God's to give. It Is not even I". T take away
. Marion Alden, Ir. Outlook.
CRANBERRY PATCHES.
How to U'tillze Waste Places on Farms Where There Is a Perennial Spring or Brook.
On a well-tilled farm between cnili vated fields was a mnd-hole covering an eighth of an acre. caused by the spreading out of the brook. The farm. er believed in utilizing the waste places and making every part of the farm contribute to the general purpose. The spring from which came the brook could not be interfered with because it produced excellent water and Was worth more than anything that could be grown in the meadow, for after passing through the swamp it ran into a trough in the pasture where the cat- tle had access to it.
There were several ways of improving this meadow and of giving the water from the spring uninterrupted flow. but all were costly except the one de- cided upon. He made a cranberry bog of the meadow. It costs about $300 an acre to make a good hog, but it pays. Several things are necessary, and one of them is facility for flooding in the fall to prevent damage hy early frosts. In this bit of meadow the farmer raised cranberries as large as cherries, always welcome to any table, and always in de- mand in the market. especially when sugar is low. Wherever there is a per- ennial spring or brook (heaven hely the farm that has neither) there are usually moist, untillable pinces, but ex- nctly adapted to cranberry culture. Put in a few cranberry plants, for eranherry sauce is sance for anything. It is more than sauce; it is food, and may be just the medicine the system needs .- George Appleton, in Farm ano Fireside.
Economy with Falles Apples. There is much waste in the common practice of turning hogs into orchards to pick up fruit and make that their exclusive diet. The bog will soon learn to eat only the ripened fruit, saving that which is wormy. This fruit can he sold or dried, and if forced to do it the bog will eat the wormy fruit before the worm escapes. But to make this really economical some grain and milk should be given to hogs in addition to their fruit diet. This will make the young pigs grow and will strengthen their di- gestion for the exclusive corn feeding that will come when they are put up to be fattened.
Green Crops for the Orchard. Bare soil soon loses its humus and be comes infertile. This must be prevent- ed. Here is une way of preventing it: Plow the orchard in the spring, eulti- vale both ways und keep all weeds down till September 1, at which time the soi will be in fine condition for a seed hed Sow rye at the rate of two hushels per acre. This will cover the ground wel. before winter, and therefore protect thr ground from blowing or bard freezin- during the winter. Let the rye stal., till knee-high in the spring, then turn under and proceed with clean cultiva tion through the summer.
CASTORIA.
Bears the Bignature
The Kind You Have Always Bought Chart Fletchers of
TYPEWRITING done ALI THE SENTINKI office.
HEAD ACHE
"Both nty wife and myself have been using CASCARETS and they are the best medicine we have ever had In the house Last week my wife was frantic with headache for twodays. she tried so tried some of your CASCARETS. and they celleved the pull In her head almost Immediately Ws both recommend Cascarets CHAS, STEDEFOND Pittsburg Safe & Deposit Co .. Pittsburg, Pa
CANDY
aecarets TRADE MARK REGISTERED
REGULATE THE LIVER
Paintabte. Potent. Taste Good Do
Good. Never Sicken Weaken or Gripe [De. De, SOc CURE CONSTIPATION. ... ...
Blerling Remedy Company. fhlenge, Montreal, New York. 517
NO-TO-BAC Sold and guaranteed by all drog. alsts to 4-V REF. Tobacco Hablt
Sharp Little Thing!
"Papa," said the missionary worker's little daughter, "I am playing that my dolls are heathen." "That is nice, dear."
"And-and -papa, I want ten cents to pay my salary."-Puck.
Whal We Eat
Is intended to contish and sustain us, that it must be digested aud assimilated before it can do this lu nther words the uuurishment contained in food must be separated by the digestive organs from the waste materials and must be carried by the blood to all parts of the Inidly. We believe the reason for the great benetit which su many peuple de rive from Hund's Sarsaparilla lies iu the fact that this medicine gives goud dt gen tous and makes pie, rich hlen. It
itlott gives strength tu nerves and nings- eles It also comes dyspepsia, berofala, Aule rheum, hoils, sontes, pimples aud eruptions, catarrh, rheumatism and all diseases that have their ong in inquire blosul
THE BRAVEST OF THE BRAVE.
"I tell you. old man, I was where the shells were the thickest!" "Where was that? Under the am- munition wagon?"-St. Louis Republic.
Grain-0! Grain-0!
Remember that name when you want a deliciuns, Anjetizing. nuorisbing fond drink to take the place of coffee. Sold by all gruceis and liked by all who have used it. Grun O is made of pure gratu; t nid digestion and strengthens the nerves It is not a stimulant, but a health builder, and the children as well as the adults can drink it with great hen- efit. Costs abunt ine-fourth as much as coffee; 15c. and 25c per package. Ask your gracer fur Grain O.
Are You Using Allen's Fool-Ease ? Shake into your shoes Allen's Fool- p.m. Ease, a powder, Il quies carne, butulates, painful, smurting. hod. swillen feet. A all draggists atul shor slures, 25c. ; sample
Free. Address Allen > Ohusted, L Y.
Educate Your Bowels Wil Caseuretes Candy Cathartic. cure constipation forever. 10c, 95c If C C. C fail, drugeists refund money.
The Kind You Have Always Bought Char+ Fletchers
A Maxim Revised.
"Tis a maxim of old (And a wise one, no doubt), To pay as you go. But in knocking about You will find that the sign Which encounters your glance Is: "Guests without baggage Must pay In advance." -N. Y World.
CARTER'S
TRADE MARK
ITTLE IVER PILLS.
CURE
Bick Headache and rellere all the troubles inci- dent to a billous eta
Sous etate of the wystem, anch 14 Dizziness, Nouses, Drowsiness, Distrene after eating, Pain in the Side, &e. While their most remarkable success hue been shown in curing SICK
Headache, yot Carter's Little Liver Pilla are equally valuable in Constipation, curing and pre- venting thisannoying complaint, while they also correct all disorders of thestomach, stimulate the liver and regulate the bowels. Even if they only cured
HEAD
Achethey would be almost priceless to those who suffer from this distressing complaint; but fortu- nately their goodness does notend here, and those who once try them will and these little pills valu- able in so many ways that they will not be wil- ling to do without them. But after all sick head
ACHE Is the bane of so many lives that here Is where we make our great hoast. Our pills cure It while others do not
Carter's Little Liver Pills aro very small and very easy to tako. One or two pilla makea dose. They are strictly vegetable and do not grips or purge, but by their gentle setion plesso all' who use them. In vialant 25 cents : Ave for $1. Sold by druggiata everywhere, or sont by mail CARTER MEDICINE CO., New York,
Small Pil. Small Dose. Small Prico. 1020 17 13 1
New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad AND CONNECTIONS. -
EASTERN DISTRICT.
#
Our. 22. 1:10.
PASSENGER TRAIN SERVICE. (DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAYS, UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED. ) Trains leave FRANKLIN for
HOSTON - 5 15, 6 57, 8 03, 0 00, 9 15, 11 41 a m. 12 50, 5 01 (Ex.) 605, 93% | m; Sundays, 8 26, 8 56 à m; 5 24 | 10. Returu, 8 07. 830 a m1: 12 04, 3 36, 4 32. 513, 2. 519, ₲ 22, 857, 8 17, IF IT p m. Sundays, 9 15 A 11, 5 15, 7 10 [ I].
BLACKSTONE-9 15 am; 4 23, 7 45 [ m. Return. 8 35, 11 26 & m ; 4 41 N m.
WALPOLE-6 15, 6 51, 8 03, 9 00. 9 15, 11 41, & m; 12 50, 5 01, 5 45, 9 3x p m. 5 8 20, $ 55 a 11; 5 26 p m. Return, x48, & m; 12 49, 4 11, 6 11,601, 7 12 9 10 pm : 12 12 a m. 8 10 17 a m, 8 17, 7 5% p mi. NORFOLK-5 15, 6 57. 8 03, 9 15 a m ; 12 68, 5 45, 9 38 pi a m; 5 26 pm. Return, 1855 a m, 11: 58,75 21, 6 1, 67 25, 9 18 ) m ; 12 21 a m 4 10 25 a n : d 25 pm.
CITY Mit.t.8 -5 15, 16 57, H 03. 19 15 1 m : f12 50, 5 45. 938 p 1. 8826 2 m, 526 101. Return, 18 58, a m : f1 01, 5 25, 6 1 4, 17 28, 19 21 pm; 1224 a m. 810 29 & m. 6 20 [ I].
PUTNAM-9 15 a m ; 4 23, 7 45 p Il. > % 11 p 11. Returu 7 20, 10 90 a m ; 3 50 p m. S : 36p m HARTFORD - 9 15 am: 423, 74% | m. Re turn, 5 10, 8 30 a :n ; ) 55 p mi.
WOOXMYCKET JUNCTION 62J pm. Returo. : 45. 8 40. 11 30 a m.
NEW YORK, all rail-9 15 a m) ; 4 23 p iti. Return 5 00,11 00 am,
New York, wia Norwich Line. #45 pm. Retura New Pier 3G, North River, 6 00 1: 1.
Providence Extenslilli
Trains leave FRANKLIN for
04,904 am; 108, 4 25, 704 111. Keturi, 6 04, 8 10, 12 04 a m ; 4 35, 6 04 |1 IN
MILFORD BRANCH.
Trains leave Franklin for
MILFORD-9 1+ 2 1 ; 1 12, 4 30, 6 27, 650 | 11, 21 37 pm. Return, 6 35.8 21,11 13 a m $ 48, 6 03 jim. $ ASHLAND-4 30 p n. Return, : MCR ID : 6 35 1: 10.
Trains leav+ Unionville for MILFORD-9 25 a m 1 19, 4 27. 041, 1 57 8144ptc testoles the functiidis of those organs | FRANKLIN-6 4. 8 91. 11 VA a 14 , 4 03, 1 13 pm
GRO 1 .. CONNORF T. M. A. (. KENDALL, G. I. A.
Explanation of seus . Daily and Sundays. f stopis on nuter- tu apetit uf . wodactur, ; daily axrept Mucalax , ៛ runs daily, ncluding Sunday but on Saturday runs two hours Inter than time giveu. 5 Stops only fur New York passengers. IF" Limited Express leaves Park square, How tou, for New York at ) jim. Runs on week days. Arrive in New York at 6 00 p m same day. Leave: New York ft 1 p m; arrives is Itoston at 6.07 p m same dav.
LIES VS. FACTS
Koman wishes to hur Gine people are Enlr Ichuled, and to them ACIUE
a pig in a bar, and un one pinces confidence In the advertisemivit of Seale inakers which
SPEAK
lunder than words, and when You find a genn " Arile made of
FOR
a fair price is it not hefler that the facts In the mvp should I looked Into by ma.ided men fi
THEERSELVES
before ht ing any kind of n sesile?
Full information regarding patterns, patries. costs, etc .. In one hook, sent free ky JONES OF BINGHAMTON,
Binghamton, N. Y.
Je9-12toam
MEDWAY SAVINGS BANK, MEDWAY, MASS.
M. M. FISHER, President. Vice-Presidente
A. M. B. Fuller. A. Park. Clerk and Treasurer, W. H. Upion.
Trustees-M. M. Fisher, A. M. B. Fuller, Wales . Kimball, Sumner Robbins,
R. P. Row, F. L. Fisher, E. C. Wilson, S. G. C . G. Clark, J. W. Thompson, A. Park, W. H. Cary, W. P. Clark G R. Drake, E. B. Stowe.
Committee of Investment - M. M. Fisher, W. H. Carv. Sumner Robbins, S. G. Clark, W. P. Clark, G. R. Drake.
Thidends declared and payable the first Mon. lay in June and December.
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