Newspapers / The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, … / May 7, 1925, edition 1 / Page 2
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n^si ffPERBERI r^ATNIw. • DEATH OF PERVUS SYNOPSIS. lntroducing "So Bis" (Dirk DeJong) In hi* In fancy. And his mother, Sellna DeJong. daughter of Simeon Peake. gambler and gentleman of fortune. Her life, to young womanhood in Chicago In U>B. has been unconventional, some what w«mr. but generally enjoy able. At school her .'hum Is Julie llempel, daughter of August Hempel. butcher. Simeon Is killed in a quarrel that Is not his own, and Sellna. nineteen years old and practically destitute, secures a position as teacher at the High Pnilrlt school. In the outskirts of Chicago, living at the home of a truck farmer. Klaas Pool. Ia Roelf, twelve years old, son of Klaas, Sellna perceives a kin dred spirit, a lover of beauty, like herself.. Sellna hears gossip concerning the affection of the "Widow Paarlenberg," rich and good-looking, for Pervus DeJong, poor truck farmer, who is Insen sible to the widow's attractions. Pervus buys Bellna'a lunch box at the community "auction." Over her lunch box. which Sellna and DeJong share together, the school-teacher arranges to In struct the farmer, whose educa tion has been neglected. Propin quity leads to mutual affection. Sellna becomes Mrs. DeJong, a "farmers wife," with all tbe hardships unavoidable at that time. Dirk la born. Sellna (of Vermont atock, businesslike and shrewd) has plans for building up the farm, which are ridiculed by her husband. CHAPTER Vl—Continued "You can't run far enough," Maartje had said. "Except you stop living you ean't run away from life." Well, she had run far enough this time. Roelf was sixteen now, Geertje twelve. Joxlna eleven. .What would thla household do now, Sellna won dered. without the woman who had been so faithful a slave to It T Who would keep the pigtails—no longer giggling—ln clean ginghams and de feat square-toed shoes? Who, when KJaas broke out In rumbling Dutch wrath agulnst what he termed Koelfs "dumb" ways, would say, "Og, Pool, leave the boy alone once. He does nothing." Who would keep Klaas him self in order; cook his meals, wash his clothes, Irvn his shirts, take a pride In the great ruddy childlike giant? Klaas answered these questions Just nine months later by marrying the Widow Paarlenberg, High Prairie was rocked with surprise. For months this marriage was the talk of the dis trict. So Insatiable waa High Prat- He's curiosity that every scrap of MWS was swallowed at a gulp. When the word went round of Roelfs flight from the farm, no one knew where. It served only as sauce to the great dish of gosalp. Sellna had known. Pervus wss ■way at the market when Roelf had knocked at the farmhouse door one night at eight, had turned the knob and entered, aa usual. Hut there waa nothing of the usual about his appear a nee. He wore bis best suit—his Qrst suit of store clothes, bought at tha time of bis mother's funeral. It nevet had Stted him; now It was grotesquely small for him. He had eliot up amat lugly In the last eight or nine months, let there waa nothing of the ridicu lous shout him ss he stood there be fore her now. tall, lean, dark. He put down his cheap yellow suitcase. "Well, Roelf." "1 am going away. I couldn't stay." She nodded. " Where r "Away. Chicago maybe." He was terribly moved, so be msde his tone casual. "They came home last night. 1 have go* some books tbst belong to yea." He made aa though to open the suitcase. "No, no! Keep them." "Good-by." "Uood-by, Roelf." She took the boy's dart head In her two hands and, atand ing on tiptoe, kissed blm. He turned te go. "Walt a minute. Walt • minute." Bhe had a few dollars—ln quarters, dimes, half dollar*— perhaps tea dollars In all—hidden away in a canister on the shelf. Site reached for It But when she came back with the box In her hand be waa gone. Chapter VW , Dhrfc was eight; Little Boblg DeJong. In a suit made of bean-sacking sewed ' together by bis mother. A brawn blond boy with mosquito bites on bis legs and bis legs never still. Nothing of tbe dreamer about this lad. The one-room school house of Seltna's day bad been replaced by a two-story brick struc ture. very A**, of wblch High Prairie WM vastly prvud. The rusty Iron *s>ve hsd been dethroned by n central beater Dirk went to school from Oc tober until June. Pervus protested ftat this was foolish. The boy could be vt great belp In tbe fields from the beginning of April to the first of No vember, but Sellna fought savagely for his srlioollng, and won. "Soblg Isn't a truck farmer." "Well, he will be pretty soon." Time I WHS fifteen I wns running our place." Verbally Sellna did not combut this. Hut within her. every force was gather ing to fight it when the time should come. Her Soblg a truck farmer, a slave to the soil, bent by It, beaten by It, blasted by It, so tliat he. In time, like the other men of High Prairie, would take on tlje very look of the rocks ftnd earth among whlcb they tolled! Dirk, at eight, was ■ none too hand some child, considering hts father and mother—or his father and mother as they had been. R was not until he was seventeen or eighteen that he was to metamorphose suddenly Into a graceful and aristocratic youngster with an Indefinable look about blm of distinction and actual elegance. Sellna was a farm woman now, near- Ing thirty. The work rode her as It had ridden Maarije Pool. In the De- Jong yard there was always a dado of washing. Faded overalls, a shirt, socks, a boy's drawers grotesquely patched and mended, towels of rough sacking. She, too, rose at four, snatched up shapeless garments. Invested her self with them, seised her great coll of flne cloudy hair, twisted It Into a utilitarian knob and skewered It with a hairpin from which the varnish bad long departed, leaving It a dull gray; thrust her slim feet shapeless shoes, dabbed her face with cold water, hurried to the kitchen stove. The work was always at her heels. Its breath hot on her neck. Seeing her thus one would have thought that the Sellna Peake of the wine-red cashmere, the fun-loving dis position, the high-spirited courage, had departed forever. But these things still persisted. For that matter, even the wine-red cashmere clung to ex istence. 80 hopelessly old-fashioned now as to be almost picturesque. It hung In Sellna's closet like a rose memory. Sometimes when she came upon It In an orfey of cleaning she would piics her rough hands over Its soft folds and by that magic process Mrs. Pervus, DeJong vanished In a poof and In her place was the girl Sellna Peake perched a-tlptoe on a s»ap box In Adam Corns' hall while all High Prairie, open-moutbed, looked on u the Impecunious Pervus DeJong threw ten hard-earned dollars at her feet. It. would be gratifying to be able to record that In theae eight or nine years Sellns bad been able to work, wonders on the DeJong farm; that the hpuse glittered, the crops thrived richly, the barn housed sleek cattle. But It could not be truthfully said. True, she hsd scbleved some chsnges, but at tbe cost of terrific effort. A less Indomitable woman would have sunk Into spsthy years before. The house hsd a coat of paint—lead-gray, because It wss cheap eat. There were two horses—the sec ond s broken-down old msre, blind In one eye, tbst they hsd picked up for five dollars sfter It had been turned out to pasture for future sale aa borae carcass. A month of rest snd pastur age restored the mare to usefulness. Sellna had made the bargain, and Per vus had scolded her roundly for It. Now he drove the fbare to market, saw that she pulled more sturdily thsn the other horse, hut hsd never retracted. It was no quality of meanness In him. Pervus merely waa like that. But tbe west alxteen! That bad been Sellna'a moat heroic achievement. Her plan, spoken of to Pervus In tbe first month of her marriage, bad taken years to mature; even now waa but a partial triumph. She had even de acended to nagging. "Why don't we put In asparagus?" "Asparagus!" cooaldered something of a luxury, snd rarely Included In tbe High Prairie truck farmer's products. "And wait three years for a crop!" "Yea. but then we'd have It. And a plantation's good for tea years, ones It's started. I've been reading up an It Tbe new way la to plant aaparagus la rowa. tbe way you would rhubarb or com. Plant alx feet apart and four acres anyway." He waa not even aufleleatly Inter ested to be amused. "Teh, four acres where? In Ifee clay land, maybe." He did laugh then. If the abort bitter aound be made could be count rued as Indicating mirth. "Out of a book." "In the day land." Sellna urged, crisply. "And out 0f s book. That west sateen Isn't bringing you any thing, Y> what difference does It make If 1 am wrong! Let me put my own money Into It. I've thought It all out Pervus. Please. Well underdraln tbe clay soil. Just fire er six acres, te start. Well manure it heavily—aa much as are can afford—and then for two yeara well plant potatoes thera. Well put In our asparagus planta the third spring—one-year-old seedlings. ni promise to keep It weeded—Dirk and L He'll be a big boy £.v that time. Let me try It, Perm*. Let > try." In the end she had her way, partly because Pervus was too occupied with his own endless work to oppose her; and partly because lie was, in his un demonstrative way* still in love with his vivacious, nimble-wltted. high spirited wife, though to her frantic goadlngs and proddlngs be wai as phlegmstlcally oblivious as an elephant to a pin prick. Though she worked as hard as any woman in High Prairie, bad as little, dressed as badly, he still regarded her as a luxury; an exquisite toy which, in a moment of madness, be had taken for himself. "Little Lina"—tolerantly, fondly. You would have thought that he spoiled her, pampered her. Per haps he even thought he did. That was Pervus. Thrifty, like his kind, but unlike them In shrewdness. Penny wise, pound foolish; a charac teristic that brought him his death. September,- usually a succession of golden days and hazy opalescent eve nings on the Illinois prairie land, was disastrously cold and rainy that year. Pervus' great frame was racked by rheumatism. He wos forty now, and over, still of magnificent physique, so that to see him suffering gave Sellna the pangs of pity that one has at sight of the very strong or the very weak in pain. He drove the weary miles to market three times a week, for Sep tember was the last big month of tbe truck farmer's season. Sellna would watch him drive off down tbe road In the creaking old market wagon, tbe green stuff protected by canvas, but Pervus wet before ever be climbed Into the seat. There never seemed to be enough waterproof canvas for both. "Pervus. take It off those sacks and put It over your shoulders.'' "That's them white globe onions. The last of 'edf I can get a fancy price for them, but not If they're all wetted down." "Don't sleep on the wsgon tonight, Pervus Sleep In Be sure. It saves In the end. Tou know the last time you were lsid -up for a week." "It'll clear. Breaking now over then In the west." The clouds did break late In the af ternoon; the fals# sun came out hot and bright, pervus slept out Id the Haymarket, for the night was dose L I i Mm' A ■i l\ L/DH/ "H»—H«'t Breathing So—" Bh. Could Not Bring Hereelf to Say, "So Tor. ribly." and hamld. At midnight the lake wind sprang tip, cold and treacherous, and with It came the rain again. Penrua waa drenched by morning, chilled, thoroughly miserable. A hot cup of coffee at four and another at ten when the rush of trading was over stimu lated him but Uttle. When he reached home It *tits mid-afternoon. Bellna put him to bed against his half-hearted protests. Banked him with hot water Jsrs, a hot Iron wrapped In flannel at his feet. But later came fever Instead of the eipected relief of perspiration. 11l though be was, he looked more ruddy and hale than moat men In health; but suddenly Sellna. startled, aaw black lines like gaahen, etched nnder his eyes, about his month, in his cheeks. In a day whan pneumonia waa known as lung fever and la a locality that advised closed windows and hot air as a remedy, Perms' battle was lost before the doctor's hooded boggy was seen standing In the yard for long boors through the night. Toward morning the doctor ha if Jan Steea stable the hone. It waa a snltry night, with flashes of heat lightning In the west. "I should think If yon opened the windows," Sellna said to the old High Prairie doctor over and over, embold ened by terror, "It would help him to breathe. Be —he's breathing so—he's breathing so—"• She could not bring herself to say. "so terribly." The sound of the words wrong her aa did the sound of his terrible breathing • •••••• Perhaps the most poigaant snd touching feature of the days that fol lowed was not the sight of this stricken giant, lying majestic and aloof In his unwanted black; nor of the boy Dirk, mystified but elated, too. with the un accustomed atlr and otcttement; nor of tbe ahabby Uttle farm that seemed to shrink and dwindle into further In significance beneath the sudden pub licity turned upon It No; it was the sight of Sellna, widowed, bat having no time for decent team The farm was there; It mat be tended. Illnaae, THE ALAMXNCE GLEANER, GRAHAM, N. C. tended, the vegetable! polled, hauled to market, eold. Upon the garden de pended the boy' a future, and hen. For the first few days following the funeral one or another of the neigh boring fanners drove the DeJong team to market, aided the blundering Jan Tn the fields. But each had his bands full wltb Ills own farm work On the fifth day Jan Steen bad to take the garden truck to Chicago, though n«t without many misgivings on Sellna's part, all of which were realised when he returned late next day with half the load still on bis wagon and a sum of money representing exactly zero In profits. Selina was standing In the kitchen doorway. Jan In the yard wltb the team. She turned her face toward the fields. An observant person (Jan Steen was not one of these) would have noted tbe singularly determined and clearcut Jaw line of this drably calicoed farm woman. * • "I'll go myself Monday.** Jan stared. "Got Go where, Mon day r "To market" At tills seeming pleasantry Jan Steen smiled uncertainly, shrugged his shoul ders, and was off to the barn. She was always saying things that didn't make sense. His horror and unbelief were shared by the rest ef High Prairie when on Monday Selina literally took the reins In her own slim work-scarred bandea "To market!" argued Jan as excited ly as his phlegmatic nature would per mit "A woman she don't go to market A woman—" "This woman does." Sellna had risen at three In the morning. Not only that, she had got Jan op, grum bling. Dirk had Joined them In the fields at five. Together the three of them had pulled and bunched a wagon load. "Size them," Sellna ordered, as they started to bancb radishes, beets, turnips, carrots. "And don't leave them loose like that Tie them tight at the heads, like this. Twice around with the string, and through. Make bouquets of them, not bandies. And we're going to scrub them." Sellna, scrubbing the carrots vigor ously under the pump, thought they emerged from their unaccustomed bath looking like clustered spears of pure gold. Jan, by now, was sullen with bewilderment. He refused to believe that she actually Intended to carry out her plan. A woman—a High Prairie farmer's wife—driving to market like a man I Alone at night In the market place—or at best in one of the cheap rooming houses I By Sunday somehow, mysteriously, the news had filtered through the district A fine state of things, and khe a widow of a week! High Prairie called at the DeJong farm on Sunday afternoon and was told that, the widow was over In the wet west sixteen, poking about with the boy Dirk at her heels. , By Monday afternoon the parlor cur tains of every High Prairie farmhouse that faced the Halsted road were agi tated as though by a brisk wind be tween the hours of three aad five, when the market wagons were to be seen moving toward Chicago. Sellna, having loaded the wagon in the yard, surveyed it with more sparkle In her eye than High Prairie would have approved in a widow of little more than a week. They had picked and bunched only the best of the late crop. Sellna stepped back and re garded the riot of crimson and green, of white and gold and purple. "Aren't they beautiful I Dirk, aren't they beautiful!" Dirk, capering in his excitement at the prospect of the trip before him, shook his heacL Impatiently. "I don't knirtr what you mean. Let's go, mother. Aren't we going now? Ton said as soon as the load was on." "Oh, Soblg, you're Just exactly like your—" Bhe stopped. "Like my what?" "Well go now, son. There's cold meat for your supper, Jan, and pota toes all sliced for frying snd half an apple pie left from noon. You ought to get In the rest of the squash and pumpkins by evening. Maybe I can sell the lot Instead of taking them in by tlie load. I'll see a commission man. Take less. If I have to." She bad dressed the boy In his home made salt cat down from one of his father's. He wore a wide-brimmed straw hat which he hated: Sellna her self, In s full-skirted blackstuff dress, mounted the wagon agilely, took op the reins, looked down st the boy seated beside her, docked to the horses. Jan Steen gave vent to a final outraged bellow. "Never In my life did I hear of such a thing!" Will Collna Mil every vegeta ble et a high prioe? Or will she eeme heme In despair! (TO u ooirratonx) SkmMmmiWmU % A etndent brought hla mother to.the university and waa ah owing her about The dear old lady waa ansloua to make her boy think that ah* understood everything "Over there, mother," said the sou, "are our wonderful polo Adds." "Oh," sighed the old lady, "what la there that la nicer than fletda of wav ing poloT" Unlucky "I heerd Ml thia afternoon." aald lira. Johnson, upon her return from a neighborhood cull, "that Mlisua Olg gery cut her foot powerful bad whilst chopping up etovewood. Alnt that just toe bndr It shore la." replied Oap Johneaa of Bumpua Ridge, "Vara Oabe won t have no wife to anpport him tar a f • £.*. 7^ Ae KITCHEN i i CABINET | L.—— J (&. l*li. Wasters Nawapapar Union.) Trui social feelinc, true warmth and cordiality naturally expresses . Itself tn words and la strengthened by the expression. EVERYBODY LIKES CANDY Homemade candy Is enjoyed by tha most of folks, and being prepared at home. Is more wholesome and f ,e ® B ex P enß ' va / \ Peanut Candy. I 1 —Take a pound of unshelled pea nuts, sbeli them, remove the brown ■ kins and roll wltb a rolling pin on a bread board until they are like coarse crumba To two pounds of brown* sugar take six ounces or twelve tableapoonfuls of butter, put over the heat and stir while melting., When tbe first boiling begins count the time, stirring to keep the mixture from bnrnlng on. After seven minutes of cooking stir In the peanuts and pour Into a greased dripping pan to cool. Sea Foam.—Take two cupfuls of sugar, three-fourths of a cupful of corn sirup, one-fourth cupful of boiling wa ter. Cook until tbe mixture makes a bard ball In water or hairs from the spoon; add one teaspoonful of vanilla and one-half cupful of nuts and pour over the, well-beaten whites of two eggs. Beat until firm enough to drop by spoonfuls on a buttered baking sheet After-Dinner Mints.—Take three cupfuls of granulated sugar, one-fourth of a teaspoonful of cream of tartar, one-half cupful of boiling water, one half tablespoonful of vinegar. 801 l until the sirup becomes brittle In wa ter. Pull when cool enough and add two drops of the oil of peppermint while pulling. Cut into small pieces and put Into a tight glass Jar. Let stand for several days. Cracker Jack. —This Is the children's favorite: Take one cupful of brown sugar and honey; boll until It hardens fn cold water. Remove from the fire and add one-half teaspoonful of soda. Stir in all the popcorn or puffed rice with a few peanuts that the sirup will take. Spread In a greased pan to cool, then mark off Into squares. Molasses Candy.—Take three cup fuls of molasses, one cupful of butter and flavor to taste. 801 l until It makes • hard ball In water. Add any desired flavoring Jnst as It Is poured Into the cooling pkn. Pull when cool; If liked, a few drops of peppermint may be sdded to the candy when pulling. Bummer Dishes. Green vegetables are especially good for us during the spring and early summer, they should be served jL- shelled peas will IM. make six lndlvid the peas In Just enough water to keep them from burn ing, adding a teaspoonful of sugar and a slice of onion; when tender, drain and cooL Soak one tablespoonful of gelatin In two tablespoonfuls of wa ter, then add one and one-half cupfuls of nicely seasoned meat stock, boil ing hot Stir until the gelatin Is dis solved, then strain and chill; add the peas and a tablespoonful of chopped red pepper, stirring until the Jelly be gins to thicken. Pour into molds, wet with cold water and place on ice. Serve, turned on sliced cucumbers dipped In French dressing or on wa ter cress. Garnish with roses of may epnalse. Mousse of Peas.—Cook a pint of peas until tender, then put through a sieve. Add one cupful of thick white sauce, one tablespoonful of gelatin softened with cold water, one beaten egg. paprika and white pepper to taste. When cool fold In one cupful of whipped cream and pour Into small ramekins to chill. When serving, garnish with a point of whipped cream topped with minced parsley. String Beans With Sour Sauo*.— Cook a quart of string beans cat Into halves' then sljt once lengthwise. Cook In boiling salted water until tender. Drain and rinse In cold water. Shred a small car of pimentos and mix with the beans, then add one-half cup ful of cream beaten with two table spoonfols of vinegar, half a teaspoon ful of salt, and a dash of pepper. Serve with sliced corned beef or hm Macarwofia.—Take one capful each of corn llakea. sugar and coconut Bent two egg white* until at Iff; add the aoplr, then two tablespooofuls of flour, the other Ingiydlants. a little aalt and. a teaapoonfnl of vanilla. Thta makee two down. Drop hy epoonfnla on bak ing ebeet. Rletorle Rloe.—Cut three sllcee a t bacon Into small equaree and cook with a cupful at ahredded cabbage, well covered for an hour. Bring a cupful of rice to a boll In a quart of boiling water, then rinse In cold water and add to the cabbage with salt pop per and a capful of hot veal broth. Cook untQ the rice la tender, adding more broth as needed. Turn Into a hot serving dish, add a spoonful of butter to the center, sprinkle gener ously with cheese and paprika and serve. Grape Sherbet.—Take a pint at thin cream, a cupful of sweetened grape Juice, one-half cupful of sugar, and the Juice of half a lemon. Frees*. lItJLUc AFTER HER BABY CAME Mrs. Hollister Unable To Do Her Work for Six Months Tells How Lydia E. Pmkham's Vegetable Compound Restored Her Health MRS. HENRY HOLLIBTKR VRTHDOM, MICHIOAN Wyandotte, Michigan.—' 'After my babv was born I did not do my own work for six months and could hardly take care of my own baby I always had a pain in «iy right aide and it was bo bad I was getting round shoulders. I would feel well one day and then feel so bad for three or four days that I would be in bed. One Sunday my mother came to see how I was, and she said a friend told her to tell me to 1 try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. So the next day! got a bottle and before it was half taken I Skank Frozen to Track F. L. lUce, a member of the section crew at Woolwich, Maine, reported one day Inst winter that as the men started over the track In the morning they saw a skunk on the track ahead of them. Drawing near, they discov ered that it had been caught there by Its fur being frozen to the frosty rail. Rice killed the skunk, and then it w«i quite a pull to free Its carcass from the rail. A Pessimist in New Bedford Teacher—Tell me, Johnqy, how many mills make a cent? Johnny—Not a one of them.—Bos ton Post. CHILDREN goric, Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups, especially prepared for Infants in arms and Children all ages. To avoid imitation*, always look for the signature of Proven directions on cadi package. Physicians everywhere Ite again ashealthyjk as you used iobeja^mW^ii The health and vigor you had in your youth can be yours again. Rheumatism, lumbago, Bright's disease, and kindred ailments, are the result of weak, sluggish, impure blood, and the reason your blood becomes like this is because it lades the iron which is essential to enable it to throw the poisons out of your system. It keeps on circulating these impuaties through your body and these ailments steadily grow worse. They finally become dangerous. The most amazing tonic ever discovered, to give your blood the iron it needs, is Acid Iron Mineral, bottled just as Nature herself produced it Physicians and scientists have never been able to duplicate ATM It is the only mineral iron which can be taken up directly by the blood corpuscles. This is why it Ruri fies and strengthens your blood and so quickly gives you bade that energy, appetite and vigorous health Nature intended you should have. For more than thirty years, this remarkable, natural blood tonic, has been bringing suffer ing men and women back to strength and health. It will do this for you. gtfsriasr itz % Ti. i dagjl A-I-M Percolating Corp. Rsl| SALEM, VIRGINIA ISPJ got relief. After I Was well again I went to the doctor and he asked ma bow I was getting along. I told him I was taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and he said it did not hurt any one to take it. I am always recommending the Vegetable Compound to others and I always hare a bottle of it on hand. "—Mi*. HENRY HAlustek, R. F. D. NO. 1. Box 7, Wyandotte, Michigan. Another Woman's Case St Paul, Minnesota. —"I have a little girl three years old and ever since her birth I nave suffered with my back as if it were breaking in two, and bearing-down pains all the time. I also had dizzy spells. I had read several letters of women in the newspapers, and the druggist recommended Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to my husband for me. As a Yeault of taking it my back has stopped aching and the awful bearing-down feeling is gone. I feel stronger and do all of my house work and tend to my little girl. I have also taken Lydia E. Pinkham's Liver Pills for constipation. I have recommended these medicines to some of my friends and you may ass this letter as a testimonial if wop wish. I will be pleased to answer letters of other women if I can help them by telling them what this medi cine haa done forme."—Mrs. PRICE, 147 West Summit Avenue, St Paul, Minnesota. Queen Mary's China Queen Mary is a great collector of china, especially yvedgewood and old Chelsea. Her majesty has been grad ually sorting and rearranging the china at Windsor, where the special cabinets containing it are lit up from inside at night. Indigestion produoea disagreeable and sometimes alarming symptoms. Wright's Indian Vegetable Pills remove symptoms and restore digestion. *7l Pearl St.. N. T. Adv. 1 Awful CirU "Gee, there's an awful lot of glrla stuck on me." "Yeah. They must be an awful lot" —Minnesota Skin Mah.
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
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May 7, 1925, edition 1
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