THE CHROMCLE.
wiLKESBORO, N. 0V;:hU
Mulhall estimate that the ciYiliz
Nations pay annually $13,700000,000
for food.
Fatness in -women is regarded as a
mark of beauty in the Orient. ; Since
their adrent in the World's Fab
grounds as sedan-chair carriers, the
Turks have had a good deal to do with
fat women, and- the Argonant avers
that they have revised their esthetics.
Joint-stock farming, by which largei
Agricultural operations can be carriee
on under one management than is pos
sible for the single-handed farmer,
will probably be one of the future de
velopments of our agricultural system.
This is a practical, way of reducing the
cost of production.
An aerial electric railway, invented
by Albert Leslie "Widdis, of Detroit, ie
expected to perform wonders. The own
er claims that it will send cars whizzing
through space at the rate of 500 miles
an hour 1 Think of it, exclaims the New
York Ledger, a letter mailed in Chi
cago will .reach New York in two
hours !
Observes the Detroit Free Press:
"There is a certain amount of scientific
interest knowing that it is not the
high temperature that makes the peo
ple uncomfortable, but the humidity
with which the air is charged. But un
fortunately the scientific fact does noi
lessen the suffering. One Is just as hot
after finding it out as when he was in
total ignorance on the point."
France is soon to adopt an interest
ing innovation in the postal-card sys
tem, announces the Argonaut. The
cards will be issued in the form of
check-books, with stubs. The sender
of the postal card can make memo
randa of its contents on the stub, and
can have this stamped at the postoffice
before the card is detached, so that a
verified record of the correspondence
can be kept.
At the moment when horses have
taken back seat in this country cam
els have come to the fore in Australia.
It is said that five lines of traffic have
been already opened up and are in
regular operation there. Two thou
sand camels are in use daily. It is noi
necessary to carry any food for these
anfmalfl, as they are able to subsist on
the coarse grass and shrubs where
horses or bullocks would starve;
Statistics concerning the failures oi
farmers in the first six months of 1893
throw bright lights on the present de
pression of agriculture in England.
From last January 1 to last July 1 the
number of failures among farmers has
been forty per cent, larger than in the
corresponding months of last year. In
England and Wales more than 16,000
persons engaged in agriculture are liv
ing in sheds, barns, tents, vans and in
the open fields. Thousands of unem
ployed agricultural laborers are hover
iug on the outskirts of London. In
the same volume of statistics 52,484
persons are reported to be living now
on coasting merchant vessels and in
land barges.
Evidence of the most direct varietj
places the blame for the destruction of
the British battle ship Victoria on the
Admiral who went down with his ship,
states the Washington Star. All the
witnesses who testified before the
court-martial at Yaletta agree on that
and : every other material point and
two of the officers heard Sir George
Try on confess the responsibility. In
all great catastrophies there is gener
ally an effort made to place the burden
on a corpse, and when Admiral Tryon
was first declared guilty many people
Imagined that the accusation was due
almost entirely to the fact that he was
dead and could not, therefore, defend
himself, but . it is now certain that he
blundered and did so with persistence
that brooked no interference.
It is .satisfactory to the Scientific
American to learn that the gentlemen
who have urged the New York botani
cal garden project are nearly now in a
condition financially able to begin ac
' tual preliminary work near the Bronx
River. At least the, sum of $215,000
has been received. , There are several
large subscriptions yetexpected from
wealthy citizens, and when these are
received it is probable the general
public will be asked to ' contribute.)
There will be no pains or expense spared
to makej the garden worthy of the State
and of the Nationi rKew Garden is the
model which the ; far-seeing 'men who
have undertaken the charge of this en
fcerprise have in view, and there : is'
every reason to believe that ."their ef
iorts will be crowned with success. '
FATIKNCB.
Be patient ! Easy words to speaks .
While plenty Alls the cup of li.
While health brings roses to the cheek,
And far removed are care and strife
ijalling: so glibly from the tongue
Of those I often think of this .
Whom suffering has never wrung, '
Who scarcely know what patience Is. -
Be patient ! when the sufTrer lies j
Prostrate beneath some fell disease,
A ad longs, through torturing agonies.
Only for one short hour of ease.
Be patient I when the weary brain.. .;.
Is racked with thought and anxious care;
A xd troubles in an endless train .
Seem almost more than it can bear.
T feel the torture of delay
The agony of hope deferred ;
T labor Still from day to day, '
The prize unwon, the prayer unheard,
d still to hope, and strive, and wait
e due reward of fortune's kiss ;
Is to almost conquer fate,
Is to learn what patience is.
pair not though the clouds are darF.
And storm and danger veil the sky :
Let fate and courage guide thy bark.
jThe storm will pass, the port is nigh.
B4 patient ! and thotide will turn,
Shadows will fade before the sun ,
These are the hopes that live and burn
To light us till our work Is done.
All the Year Bound.
AUNT SUSAN'S QUILT.
F Jimmy and his
bride ain't
pleased with
that, I don't
know what would
please 'em," said
little Mrs. Dake
with arms akim
bo and head
twisted to one
mmiff stepped back and
gazed with admiration at the object
spread out on the bed. It was a carefully-pieced
quilt, of a somewhat in
tricate pattern.
"Jimmy's bride can't help being
tickled with that," said Mrs. Dake, as
phe smoothed out a fold; ''and if she
knows anything about nice quiting,
shell see that wa'n't quilted in a day.
WjaU, I guess not ! I quilted ev'ry last
ititch of it myself, and there's a good
half-day's work in some of them blocks,
with the feather and herrin' bone pat
terns and the shell border all 'round
th aidge. I had that quilt in the
frames five weeks and three days, and
I put all the time I could get on it, and
there ain't no slack work, tired as I
did get of seeing it 'round."
She smoothed out another crease.
f'Lemme see, " she went on. "There's
2147 pieces in the quilt, and a good
many of 'em are pieces of Jimmy's lit-,
tie baby dresses. That'll please his'
wi !e, I jest know. Here's a block made
of oalico like a little pink dress he had
wi en his ma first put him into short
dresses. I remember it was made
with a low neck and short sleeves, like
they made baby dresses in them days,
and his little shoulders and arms v as
almost as pink as the dress.
-l'And here's pieces like a little double
gown he had 'fore he went into short
dresses. And this piece of blue cham-
bexy is like a little sunbonnet he had,
all jlined with fine white jaconet. And
here is a piece of fine muslin with a
little pink sprig in it like the first short
dress Jimmy ever had. He did look
so foinnin'in it, with the sleeves looped
back, and a tumble-curl on the top of
his head! 1
I'll show his wife-to-be all these
pieces, and if she ain't tickled with the
quilt, shell be a queer one."
Then Mrs. Dake went over to an
old-fashioned mahogany bureau with
brass knobs, and took from the upper
drawer a large, square cream-tinted
envelope, out of which she carefully
drew the "invite" to Jimmy's wed
ding. 'Mr. and Mrs. William P. Holbrook
Invite you to be present at the mar
riage of their daughter Helen and
James Barclay Larkin, Wednesday
evening, September 14."
Then followed the address of the
bride's parents, in a city 400 miles
from Mrs. Dake's home.
'fBut I'm goin' 1" she said gleefully,
as she slipped the invitation back into
its Jenvelope. "I'd go if it was twice
as far. I ain't seen Jimmy for near on
to five years, and he always seemed
like my own boy to me 'cause I never
none o my own, and I helped to
ig him up after his own ma died.
wh&n he wa'n't but just in his first little
trousies."
'IT aint been so far from home in
many a long year, and I reckoned my
feratelin' days was done, but I've got
to go and see Jimmy married. I must
see Elviry Hodge right away about
tuning and making over my black
lilk, and I must see Samantha Rose
jfcbont a new cap. I guess I'll have to
have something kind o' smart for a
city weddin', where thev'll all ha fini-
up so. I don't want Jimmy to be
ted of his old aunty : but lawsv
Jimmy wouldn't be ashamed of
I went in my plain calico house
He wa n t raised to set clothes
above his relations, and he ain't cot
nothing to be 'shamed of in any of his
lolks." , . ' ;.'
Then Jimmy's aunt, her ; face aglow
t witi. loving thoughts of seeing Jimmy
again, folded up the quilt carefully in
an j old sheet, and laid - it away in a
lower drawer of the bureau, saying: : ;
- 'u s'poser they'll have lots of nice
presents, but I'll warrant you they
on't have one that represents as much
lavhx 'y labor as that ' quilt. I had to
err a little when I quilted them -blocks
wit! i the pieces of his baby . dresses in
.'ezn,: -His wife ought to think the
world and all of the quilt. -' I hope to
the land she won't go to' using it com
mon." , . ' -
Aft
This
urns
i
isisii
fled
asnan:
met
me if
or ess.
jjxa JLJafce, vrna was a widow and
-childless, ; lived m . T a small, remote
country town in which hex nephew
James Jjarkm, : had, been born, and
from which he had, gone ; to become a
successful young. lawyer; in the city.
He had not been back to the home of
his childhood for : five years. As his
Aunt Susan sad, he "waVt no hand
to write letters," but he often sent
brief notes and little gifts to his aunt
to assure her of his affection and
gratitude.
He had not announced his encace-
ment to her, ana the invitation to his
wedding was one of the greatest sur-
prises of Mrs. Dake s uneventful life,
"He jest wanted to give his old
aunty a big s'prise," she said to Elvira
Hodge, the village seamstress, when
she came to "fix over" Aunt Susan's
black silk. "I couldn't believe my
own eyes at firsts It don't seem no
longer than yesterday that Jimmy was
runnin' 'round here in pinafores ; and
io xiuxxo. vi jinn uom JLutuxieu j. de
clare I can't git over it !
"But I'll give him a s'prise, too. I
don't intend to give him a hint that
I'm comin to his weddin, and if he
won't be took back when he sees me
marchin' in on him, my name ain't
Susan Elizabeth Dake! Don't you
reckon his wife'll be tickled with that
quilt, Elviry?"
"They'd ought to be, that's sure,"
said Elvira.
"I think it's a kind of special Provi
dence that I put in the frames when I
did. I didn't cal'lafe on quiltin' it
until next winter, but I had a kind of
feelin that I d better do it when I did,
and now it s turned out that there was
a good reason why I should quilt it
""Cii"
There was quite a company of Aunt
Susan s friends at the little station to
see her off on the morning she started,
There was unusual color in her cheeks
and unwonted sparkle in her eyes,
She bade eacn oi ner friends good-bye
two or three times, and promised to
take good care of herself. Some of
tnem sne promised a crumb of J immy s
wedding cake, and a full account of
the wedding festivities.
"An' if you could git me a scrap of
the bride's weddin' dress an' of any of
ner otner dresses for my silk quilt,
Susan, I d be so pleased with 'eml"
said old Mrs. Gray.
1 will if I can, Nancy.
said Aunt
tiusan.
I'm so
glad I could get my trunk
cntJOiteu ciean inrougn J J. a De in a
i t n i t i . nr. - i
nice fix if that trunk should get lost
with Jimmy's quilt and my black silk
in it I Where's my lunch basket? Oh,
yoh're goin' to carry it away on the
train for me, are you, Hiram Drew?
I'm 'bleeged to you, but mind you git
off the train fore it starts. Good-bye,
Nancy; good-bye alll"
In a moment the train was on its
way, Aunt bnsan s nandkerchiel flut
tered from one of car windows as loner
as the train was within sight of the lit-
tie station.
All the people in the car noticed the
happy old lady in her queer, old fash
ioned garb. Some had not seen for
many years a shawl like the one she
wore, with its fringe a foot long and
silk embroidery in the corners; but
nothing was coarse or amiss in her
dress, and there was a quaintness and
charm about her that attracted the
sympathy of all the passengers.
She had not gone twenty-five miles
before she was telling . some of them
nearest her all about Jimmy and Jim
my's quilt, and the wedding to take
place on the coming "Wednesday.
She was delighted to find that a mid-
die aged, kindly looking woman who
was one of the passengers lived in the
city in which young Mr. Larkin lived,
and could easily show her his board
ing house.
"I'm so muoh obleeged to you !"said
Aunt Susan. 'I've been dreadful nerv
ous 'bout trying to find the house my
self. I hated to write to hirr to meet
me, 'cause it'd take off the best part of
the s'prise. I jest want to walk right
in on him. "
That was just what she had the
pleasure of doing the next afternoon.
James Larkin was taking his wed
ding suit from the box in which it had
been v sent home, when there came a
knock at the door of his room.
Aunt Susan was trembling with ex
citement when her nephew opened the
door.
"Why, Aunt Susan I" he cried, and
then he took her into his arms and
kissed her on both cheeks.
There was no lack of tenderness in
her nephew's greeting, yet the change
in him was painful to her. He was a
beardless, boyish-looking young man
when she had seen him last. Now he
was a tall, broad-shouldered, full
bearded man with a way that made it
a little hard for her to call him
"Jimmy." He did not say so, but
she felt that he would rather have her
call him "James and that sounded
so cold and formal to her.
He now had the graces of a city
bred young man. She found . it hard
to accommodate herself to them, and
to the usages of the fashionable boarding-house
in which her prosperous
young nephew lived.
He might, perhaps, have wished that
Elvira Hodge had made his aunt's
garments more stylish when he took
her down to dinner, but he was in no
sense ashamed of her. "When, they
were going down stairs with her hand
timidly resting on his arm, he made
her very iappy by looking down into
her face and saying tenderly and heart
ily, HI am so glad you came Aunt
Susan." : ;
"I thought you would be, she said,"
patting.his arm affectionately. . You
know you're the only boy I ever had.
"And you were always . the best of
mothers to me."-;::;: y' .y:-VV-
But when she was alone in her room
she wondered if it i. had been wise for
her to ; come .after aU. She did not
doubt now that James was genuinely
hapgy to see her, but she had discov
ered that his betrothed was the daugh-
of a ricn man, and that the wed
ding was to be an elegant affair. Aunt
Susan feared i she would I be out oi
piace mu cue mignt in her inno
cence do ? or say something to give
James and his bride cause to be
ashamed of her. - n v-
. - -
Theweaoing was to take place the
next evening, and there would be no
opportunity for her to meet the bride
or her family until then. All was sa
new and strange to her !
She naa expected to "take riff hi
noia ana ueipjnrs. Uolbrook with the
i t 3 -
wedding dinner, even if she did "keer
a girl." There was a bir. new kitchen
apron in her trunk, brought with Auni
Susan to be worn while she was "mak
ing herself useful in Mrs. Holbrook'a
kitchen." It disappointed her to be
told by her nephew, that her services
would not be required, and that
caterer would provide the supper.
one aid noi snow wnat a oate?
was, and felt confused and uneasv and
went . to sleep half wishincr herself
home. -
W - -v.
When, tne next, evening, she found
herself m the beautiful house of Mr.
Holbrook, surrounded by finely-
dressed ladies and gentlemen wha
looked curiously at the odd-looking
little old woman in the queerly-mad
and old-fashioned black silk, she heart
ily wished that she had not come.
JVlr. ana IVLrs. Holbrook were as at-
TOii.iii.YU wj utsr t v"y UUUIU do Wltn &
house full of guests; but Aunt Susan
soon found it convenient to slip ofl
into a corner, where she hid like the
little country mouse she was.
But she was glad, after all, that she
had come when James, looking so tall
and happy and handsome, came into
the great parlors with his bride on his
arm in her trailing, white satin dress
and long veil. Aunt Susan was so com
pletely overawed by this magnificence
that, instead of going forward with the
others to offer her congratulations, she
slipped off up-stairs to the room in
I which she had taken off her bonnet and
shawl. In it was her wedding gift to
Jimmy the quilt that had but vester
day seemed to her as beautiful and ap
propriate a gift as she could bestow
upon him.
Across the hall was the open door of
a room almost filled with shining: silver
and glittering glass, with pictures, and
rare ornaments, and beautiful books,
gifts to James and his bride.
Aunt Susan felt that her own offer
ing, although it was the gift of her own
labor and love, Would be out of place.
It might offend her nephew and his
bride to see it there. Some one might
laugh and jeer at it, and she could not
Dear to tmnK oi tnac. it seemed so
poor and trifling, now ; she could not
bear to think of allowing Jimmy and
his wife to know that she had brought
them such a gift.
She turned back a corner of the
quilt, and looked at a piece of the pink
and white muslin of which one ot
Jimmy's
first garments have been
made. A nood oi tender memories
filled her heart, and she buried hei
face in her gift and cried as she had
not cried for years.
There she sat for a long time, pay-
ing no neea to tne noise ana merri
ment downstairs. Presently she heard
a rustle of silk and satin in the hall,
ana a low murmur oi voices, in a
moment a pair of soft arms were
around her neck, and a girlish voice
was saying:
"I
am so eriaa tnat we nave round
you at last ! "We have been looking
everywhere for you !
"When Aunt Susan looked up she
found the bride kneeling by hex side,
while James was bending low over
her.
"You haven't been up here all thia
time, have you?" he said. ""We have
wondered where vou were. Helen was
so anxious to see you. "
"Of course I was," said the bride.
"There is no one here I am so glad to
see. James has told me all about you,
and it was so good of you to come so
far to see us married. You must kiss
us both and wish us joy, won't you?"
"If you'll let me, said Aunt Susan,
with the tears still m her eyes.
"Let vou I" said James. "We should
think it very strange if you didn't.
What have you'here? It looks like on
of the auilts vou used to make. It ii
a quilt, isn't it?"
Aunt Susan tried to conceal the quilt,
but James took it from her and un
folded it. Suddenly he said :
"Why, Aunt Susan, didn't youhrinfj
this for a wedding present?
"Well, I I did think I'd give it to
your wife, James,"- said Aunt Susan,
soberly. "I thought that well well,
you see, I made it ev'ry stitch myseM
and and there's lots of pieces in it
from the first clothes you ever had,
and I thought maybe she'd like it be
cause I did it ev ry stitch myself, and-
"Like it?" cried Helen. "I shall
value it above any crift have had I It
is beautiful I never saw such exquis
ite needlework 1 What weeks of labor
it must have cost you. I am so proud
of it !"
"She said them very words," said
Aunt Susan to half a dozen of her de
lighted friends who came to see her
the day she reached home. She waa
so tickled over the quilt. She fairly
criea wnen snowed ner tne diooks
made out of pieces of Jimmy's things.
"She said she'd think the world and
all of it. She and Jimmy had to go
off their weddin' tower in about an
hour, and I expected to come on home
that night; but Mr., and Mrs. Hol
brook wouldn't hear to it.
"They made me stay there a whole
week, and they treated me as if I was
one of the greatest ladies, in the land.
They took me to ride ev'ry day, g,nd
they; never seemed to mind a bit
about my old-fashioned ways said
clothes.', v li yy:f 5 :y"iy .$:":
"I had a beautiful time ; and the
best part of it is that Jimmv and his
wife are coming to make me a visit on
ner waynome from their tower next
weeki : : Zou never see such a splendid
young woman as she is I"
I ter
The New Tear Finds Us in Our
New Store Building,
Full and Complete Stock
Of New Goods of Every Description, which vre are Selling at v
PRICES VERY LOW
To suit the Stringency of the Times.
We keep a full line of everything to meet the wants of our p9$e and
are prepared to give our customers the best the markets afford on all kinds of
proauoe as wen as ine lowest ngures on evry iuu u gui.
We desire to thank our people for the liberal patronage they have given
this house under the different names of J. A. Cooper & Co. and T. S. Miller
& Co., and assure our friends that we ar better prepared than ever to satis
factorily meet their wants. We solicit your continued support.
mm
W. DRUG
Wilkesboro,
Keep on hand a full line of Fresh
rinn iranf i'n o T7irt moo
Compounded. Jgt Store in the Old Steve Johnson Building, just opposite tht
Jourt House, lie sure to call and see them. . . "
R
RSI. STALE Y &
DEALER IN
Drags, Patent Medicines, Tobacco, Cigars, Cigarettes, Fancy and
Toilet Soaps, etc., etc.
fgPrescriptions promptly and
BRICK HOTEL BUILDING.
Di N.'R. Holcomb,
DENTIST.
Graduate of Vanderbilt University.
Will be in hi office in Miller Buildirig
fqm 1st to 10th of each month, when he
will practice his profession in all its
bjpncnei in the latest styles at reasonable
rate, A Jtria.1 solicited.
The Soldier's Pace in Marching.
Apropos of marching, Colonel HuUor
reminds us that the marching value of an
army is that of its worst regiments rather
than of its best, for we cannot afford to
inarch so as to outmarch our worst regi
ments and thus deplete them of their
men. The rate of marching laid down
in the infantry drill, 1892 that is, 120
paces of thirty inches per minute gives
& rato of 3 miles 720 yards per hour, or,
including five minutes' halt, 3 miles 220
pards per fifty-five minutes. This pace
is, in the opinion of this officer, obvi
ously too great for the movement of
larger units of command than a battalion
or perhaps of a weak brigade without
baggage train. It is universally accepted
by continental authorities that the rate
for marching under campaigning
conditions is ' two and a half
miles per hour, including five to ten
minutes' halt. The French, who have
the tradition of being the best marohers
in Europe, lay down in precise form the
rate of march for their infantry at two
and forty-eight one-hundredth miles per
hour, including ten minutes' halt, giving.
therefore, two and forty-eight one-
hundredth miles in ' fifty minutes, or
eiffhty-seven and five one-hundredth
yards per minute. The Alpine Chasseuri
-the pick of tne Jb rencn lnrantry, wno
take special pride in their marching
powers march at the rate of five kilo
meters or three miles and one-tenth pel
hour, including ten minutes' halt, or three
and one one-nunareatn miles in nity
aiinutes. '
Tropical Roofs.
The natives of the interior of Ceylon
finish walls and roofs with a paste of
slaked lime gluten and alum, which
glazes and is so durable that specimens
three centurie old are now to be seen.
On tli ft Malabar coast the fiat bamboo
roofs are covered with a mixture of cow
dung, etraw and clay. This is a poor
conductor of heat, and not onlv with
stands the heavy rains to a remarkable
degree, but keeps the huts cool in hot
weather. In Sumatra the native women
braid a coarse cloth of palm leaves for
the edge and top of the roofs. Many of
the old isuddnist temples in inaia ana
Ppvlrm had rnofa made out of cut-atone
blocks, hewed timber, and split bamboo
poles. Uneven planks, cut from old and
dead palm trees seldom from living
young trees are mucn used in tne
Celebes and Philippines. Sharks' skins
form the roofs of fishermen in the Anda
man Islands. The Malays of Malacca
Sumatra and Java have a roofing of at
taps, pieces of palm leaf wicker work
fthnut thrfifl feet hv two in. size and an
inch thick, which are laid like shingles
and are practically water-proof. The
Arabs of the East Indies make a durable
roof paint of slaked lime, blood and -ce
ment. Europeans sometimes use old
sails made proof against water, mould.
and inser.ts hv liaraffine . and norms? v
sublimate for temporary roofs. Scien
viuu American. .
;Bro
WITH A,
STOKE.
North Carolina.
Drugs, Medicines, Oils, Paints, Varnishe
Timtr fttore. t3T"PrescriDtioDB Carefully
accurately filled.
Situated in th
That R. C. LOWE is now at the New
Hotel in Staleys Drug Store an is still
able to - hit the grit," and repairing
watches and clocks. His work fully
warranted and guaranteed.
Keeps always on hand clocks, watches
and jewelry. Come and see for yourself.
lot. O. LOWE,
r Jeweler.
WILKESBORO, - - H. C,
-' 1 ' " " 1 in i
c. t. WAKHtn, ivi. b.
Mulberry, N. C.
Can be found in his. office when not
professionally engaged. .
' ii BJ J. V ' ;
LIVERY & FEED STABLES,
A. C WELLBORN. PROP
Situated on Main Street, east of the
Court House. Good horses asd new ve
hicles of all kinds ie"-dy for the accom
modation of the i raveling public. Horses
carefully fed and attended to. Give
us a trial and see how we feed.
A .C. WELLBORN,
Wilkesboro, - North Carolina.
H. B. PARKER, JR.
at
Iorth W-iKtbboro, North Carolina.
OFFICE IN HOTEL GORDON.
Prompt attention paid to all business.
Collections a specialty .
J. S. Cranor.
J. B. Buxton,
CRANOR & BUXTON,
. I TTOliXEY A T JU.4 W,
Wilkesboro North, Carolina,
Will practice iirihe courts .of W-lko",
As;u AlWli'inv an-1 For v the. -v
3T- HACKETT,
Attorneys at Law, .
WILKESBORO, N. C. -
, Will practice in the State and Federal
Courts.
ISAAC C. WELLBORN,
Attorney - at - Law;
2NT-
17111 practice In all the courts. Dealer
In real estate. Prompt attention paid to
collection of claims.
T. B. Fnrunr.
H.. L. Gnsxira.
FIIILEY & GREEtlE,
Attorn eyo - at - Law,
WILKESBORO, N. C.
Will practice in , all the coutU , Col
taction a specialty.. Real estate sold on
cramisIon,
- i
(
7-