Ontario Community Newspapers

Northern Advance, 9 May 1912, p. 7

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`ing at th dovor of %skeg`>ticisin., and h to test out any ad- vertiswing: An Actual` Experience That Completely Routs The Unique Theory he H A tvfelve L6} ihqlduanc tfuertialfny Man talk it over with you. If you ; are not advertising now we wont to. talk the matter over with you Av `So it may be that the gray ruins `of the Residency, `over which the gag ies that was kept there so res- olutely by the and Women in 57, saw the beginning of another |love idyll, destined to end as happily] gas tha.t '.Which had its being am-idsti {the terrors: and fury of ' the Mutiny. > > I I Remetrnbetr, `no one. lies awake] thinking of your business; out of` {print, out of mind. 1.) """ I am sure my mother will be glad 'to meet you and hear all about those old days at Lucknow, she said shy- ly. T ` ' I - .. May, 2 and May, uuu JUULL 400 uuc uau, WU11 I: you" The girl ` was somewhat breathlss. i.Young Malcolm was looking at herl `as though he f<-`sl't that a special dis- gpensation of Providence had brought lthem tngether. - uua Yes, really, I m his grandson. Now, isn t that the queerest thing? Just `imagine the odds against my` meeting you here under such con- dition? Please tell me your name, and ym-1 ll let me call, won t you ? | Tho lI|:1I1`II1nn .~.......~...1.-..-.1. L_.....LL1_-~ ....,,, ...,.. . \ X _ _ N . _ They were engaged just be- [fone the Residency was -invested. It is an 3awfully interesting yarn, and I should like someday to have a chance of telling it to you. There is`a native princess ` in it, and a pearl-` necklace, which is worth quite la lot of money, and is believed to have been stolen by a sepoy before lmy grandfather obtained it, quite by Iaecident. And the old chap--he was .quite a. young chap then, you know -had a remarkable` native serv-ant ,.who did so well at the Mutiny that he became a nawab or something of the sort. Really, thewhole. thing is more like a book than u\~a chapter of real life. ' i I had a grandmother in the Mn- tiny, said the girl, but she had =such a. sad experience that she sel- dom mentioned it. Her maiden name was Keene, -and her "father was kill- ed at F attehxpore-- I 'II.....-.-I 11:1 -1- , I :- ;.\_u u uuu;uIy\.MU"" man named Malcolm, who saved her and her sister? ul\`l I -29 - - f{eenne! `Did she ever speak of ai uuwvuuxv IIlIll\.lL,55$o , eYou`are stationed` here, I sup-I ,poaee she said. M : vNo, indeed. My regiment is at Quetta, but _I was reared ' on the re- cords of Lucknow. My grandmother went through the whole of the siege, -and my grandfather was with the Second Relief. It must have agreed with their health", for they were both out here two years since, and I went over the Mutiny ground with them. I 'D"....... :...4.........L:......I , LJJVJVV Ill-`U ii they met ? -- .. (CRT- VIVL. tibn, K6 poihted out several Ihiatzosric buildings. ` tcv..- ...... _..:-_-.1 1.-_; 1 _ l 1. CLD LCVL 3 `bh, yes! You don t mean to .. 7`) ' ' I V; 0.26 H-ow .nn.|.n.vnaaJ BLUIAA-l\.l VVLIAH Ullculo igliteresting! . `Was that how + 2 - THE END. Let 1__1s not try to qualify for the _diIpe museum. `Let us get down to" selling -goods. And selling goods- no omatter What the goods are--is - easier if the goods are advertised. months trial was agreed upon. To- day, at the end of 18 months, this rm is advertising on a much larger scale. Direct orders for the hard- guvuua. , uuuuz uusu aauvvz uzasug JD l oked:w11pon. by that sales manager as an all-important factor in his b. . bu. . gsts that they should advertise. Oh, my business is unique--it can- not be advertised .s_uccessf1111y. Havexft you often heard it? Have you ever said it yourself? 'YoA1m _sa.y your p1_'oposition_ is d_.ierent? f Vry well; advertise it in a dif- ferent way, _ T This replica is an exact duplica- tion of the sunken leviathan down to the mdntltest detail. It was sent to this country to be exhibited as a. ispecimen of the unsinkable ship. ZThere- is one strange coincidence about the model. There is a large lrent at the bow, from keel to upper- [most deck, similar to the one that Isent the Titantic to the bottom. Also there -are davits for tnvernty lifeboats, ib-ut only twelve boats are shown, iBow of 30-foot Created for Exhibition is Smashed. New York, May 1.-A large crate stands on White Star pier 61 await.- ing shipment to England on the Adriatic. It contains a thirty-foot model of a g'ia~nt ocean liner, and cost $16,000 to build, but it is not of `any use for exhibition purposes now. It is a model of the Titanic. ..-..v.-\.. -.- u-`cg; AvI~LAvvuJ System, are progressing and the ad- dition of fty more rooms to this hotel will be completed and ready for the reception of guests about June 1st. The -aeoommedation of this popular inn will when the annex is nished be for 200 guests. Situated 1,700 feet above the sea level the air is -pure and invigorating and there are few places in Canada which of- fer sueh attractions to the summer resorter as thoee that are found in A`l_.___ -,,! The improvements being made in connection with the Highlzandi Inn, situated in the Algonquin National Park of Ontario, 170 miles west of Ottawa, and 205 miles north of To- ronto onnthe Grand Trunk gvafn-rn cum on ...'....... .....J. 1.1.. ..'l k A \4L7\IL vs/A (AA) ul-I\l\7\J I Algonquin Park. V .Au..I.\JLl4J.J.V 1'4. :-`ii fovz-Q. o ,Lt'.-Gb1.'O.`F. Wiant'er s Reo- ollections of Tel-e1-Kebiri-"128 are ex- -tnamelyi interesting. y relate the experiences 01 a. Canadian in that famous encounter. F. A. .Wightan.1'm gives the first of a series. of articles on the contrasts in cusp toms, names, expressions, etc., that prevail in the Maritime Provinces. Mary Adelaide Snider contributes a. stirring account of how the Brit- ish in 1912 avenged the destruction of the good ship Namacy.v `Currie Love describes 9, fascinating shing trip along the Bow River, near Cal- gary. H. Mo'rti.rmer-Lamb has Gs splsndidily illustrated article on P ortography as a means of an-tie-~ tic expression, and Katherine Hale has a comprehensive review of the. Music of the season. There are, short stories, sketches and poems. ALGONQUIN NATIONAL PARK HOLE IN TITANIC MODEL. CANADIAN MAAZII_~IE_. . LL. (1.... .1: ._ rtrher;:-- up... .;E* Park ufgtil: b"\J VI no-nt `I 5 .W ill heque > the \AQ\I CHAPTER xV1I,--.(comin;uec1-)V Altl1o11gl1 no Briton -was seen to` injure :1 woman or child in the! st.rc(*ts or 110119193 of` Delhi, the: ave11;z`i11;," arxny s1pared no mazn. Uu.-, happily t11o1.1sz1.11.ds of citi- zens \vc1'c slaughtered Side by `side with the 11111tinee.rs. The1Brit-ish had received 11 gTeat provocation V and they 1-.\':1c1`e11 11 be11'1'i-ble payment. 7011 the. 211111 the gates of't1he palace were 1111111-ml i111 and the Britishag' .wa.s l1oisI 1'1'u111 its topmosltz turret.- 'J'l1c11, 111111 not till then-, did` Del-h-i fall. T111, lz1.<.t'. of the Moguls was' 1l1`i\'1`11 f1'n111 the halls which hadWit- m_.~.~1-11 1.1112 g1-z111 and. pomp of I his i111111o1'i'.1l p1'cde_0ess0rs, arndi -t-he, g1`1:11 city passed` into the hands of 1.111. 111~w moo that had` come to lc-11v<-11 1111- .dccz1yi11g' East. It was a t.riu111ph. On Septem-_| bcr 14 1111- Q011qucri11g` army lost` sixty-six uffict.-1's and eleven hundred and 11.111` 111011. Between May 30 and S1.-1111111111111` `.30 the total British 038' nultics \v13r1-. 11ca1'ly four tl`1ousa1'1(}. \l,1 1 1-___,_4. uuunxa u A\- 4n\.LM&J J\J\J'L v5l\It5s3-bJ.\lO J .\lu1cn1ui soon learnt thiati `the 1 i-iim-s.~: l{ns11ia1ara had ed with her fzltlii.-1' am] hr"i}?(*`I`.... Probably the duzilh .1 A1-zliab Khan had unnerved hm`, :ui. she dzlmd not trust to the 1ii<~i'<.~yufti1 'viCt0r& Frank was u1ii<.1i;_: the I`St to enter the palace. . \fI<~1' -.1 11-w fum-1.t.ica1 ghazeesi were Iilaidc an end Hf, he hurried towards thv Z(`Il2lI]:,l. lt was empty. He S('1lI`('i1(.`ti its glittering agartanants with fcvi-1'is]i anxiety, but.-he InBt~110 iuuiiam i:('i]l;.`,' until Sonle ~1'n:eIn `Of the 7.311; (`I|I('l'Ni and began to prise open hux<~.~: :!ll (:1iphuz11'ds= in the searchi for iuul. ' .\1`i-r that his duties took him to th- J'ii4i}_'4'. and it vas not until all` was u\'\`l' that he heairld h0.W Hodson haul i-:i1uIiii'- the King` and shot the 1'U_\'ili ]il'iIH'l.'.~' with his own hand. 'J.`i1i.~' 11':i_"i-ti)` lrmii place 011 the road, fiwiiii lim.~i:i,\'ii11`.s 'l`<)m.b, whither the] \\'1'('i( i1Hi Iii'r11:ll`(:h ret.reated- When it \\';i.~: .~:-<,-ii that Delhi must yield; 1I.il.~m <'i:lilH(`1i to be an executioner III! :1 iiiurrh-n- He helxl that he 3`.`1t'li 1l!1rh`I` li1(,~ pressure of a mob, inn-m in i~<<-uiing Mirza Moghuly the il1`i!` .-imi:1i'<-lit, and his brother. and mi). That all three Were.` coiw-' zmlly l`Hiii::lI.~ um: 'IYlK.`I1UilGSS in their ` I_tr<~;mn.-m oi the Eniglish ca-ptu-red 111 In-lhi mi May 11, cannot be dcI1i<: hm lI.o(l.~`(_>11 s action was 00I1"1 (10-Il`111 hy immy, and it was 1361" hftlit-I as \\"cH that he found a sol- gi':m- <.`.u1'in.g Colin Camp` ' --nu, um. uu;uu VVL-Lu vugvv :mll_\ of hm. 0011-1 and hl-1 thalt found: di" 5 :~"I`zl\'<- .`.u1-ing Camp- b011'.~I zulv:1m:n on Lucknow. ' _ _ It \\'21.~' t]1<~1`<: that the fortune '-Of war HPXT lumught Malcolm. "Delhi hild .~ quieted down afterthe storm. and f'm`V of the week s. street. -'~"1 illfi W l u `I 1 .1 I 2.1 vcloc-l<' reinforced Ulllmlllnl. lr<>vf> t.l1e rez1ief.f0i`.ce Y`()1l`_"lI -`lg - x v. ` the ]{m(!'f:l(`n\;a.l1}f g:.x1t .a1n.%O,t2t1 ,ros1i3d` f0'i1'i%' 114-1' \I\':lYl m~ .il1," N-.'!_ I ' 7 `\ E '\`.. On V6?` 'd for 17 -20 uni - `and m-w infped viglgfn that hope in the hvzlrts Oi 9% gt. V Apathy had cow-:1 ovml 1.0 despair` {was the` a quiet wui1ing..forVdeatk,_ I>rcva1C1 t. :1t1i1'udc,i11 Lucm 1Ii:;'l1lu.ud lmnnctsd Were { Ytmeers that tried '00 bar their age -thr j besieged took up the Oemg f lines were ;n'ea. 013 ext! nemy s -advanced Posts` With the bayonet, twwbleeoam F Were sciz ' and` SDikd'9'n.-d il ` I ing operations SWW9 1 Two days before H'9-V1 k`:,. cut its way in? `Lk3:?:.b3 , `End. the pellsrionetfy '1`9Pt " N 1 -Mrenchment and Wm. M ` ~.-Mining relief. He .W9. ` Twice almn.-1).. - ' .,` " `of mu`?! .'11wvr- the lab`; 11716 j V -'t1v,'- ough the streeth At` om V07` Io` ,0! olo '0] BANK JEQYA SCOTIA '_Im:6r;S>tated Barrie Branch. Five Points. A % %1 A Correct Nar- ative of the In- dian Mutiny om: CAPITAL $3,984,000.00 Author o! T "Wings Q! the Morninu," Etc. IJVNFVII thus I ;:.vv 4 qunuv .l_.dVU1'U-U- 01111199. Lamy in October the thermometer falls by many degrees each day. The reason `is, of course, that the diminishing power of the sun perniits the earth Ito throw off by night the heat, al- ways intense, etored during the day. Sormething in the nature of an _.a.tmospheric vacuum is thus created and the resultantico-Id; continues un- til the opposite- effect brings about the lasting heat of the summer months, which begin about March 15 lin that part of "India; ` 1);-` ..-:.-..;.:2- -__1-_.'_;_---e :- ill Uvlv-`C-NI.` 1-VCIIJI UL LIl\.lIaI _ But scientic explanations of un- pleasant phenomena are poor sub- stitutes for scanty clothing`. In some respects the last position of the he- leaguered garrison was worse than the mat, and the days were on in seemingly endless misery, until ab- solutely authentic intelligence a~rriv* ed on November 9, that Sir Colin Campbell was at Bunnee and Would. n'1arch.Vforthwith to relieve the Resi- dency. - 7111---- I\-_1._._.._ .._I_- 1.-.] ..;.--..-.1- LL'LI~lLl}.y I Then Outram, who had succeed- ed to the chief command as soon as Havelioclgz joined `hands with In:g1is',. called for a volunteer who would act as Sir Co1in s- guide through `the net- hwork of canals, roads, and scattered ' suburbs-I `that added to the dangers: of 'Lu:cknow s narrow- streets, and a m'a.n named K-avanagh, an 1mcoven- zulted civilian, offered his services. A_-L 1--_..1- 4... ...:,.4......... `[(.-. ..mn. have been nangeu wm.u..., . -----v, [and possibly not .without g` - cause. On the afternoon of Noyetmlber I111, is little army. It was drawn up in panwde order, on a plain a few miles south of the ` Dilkusha. Three lthousand four hundred men` faced` him, and` the am? lness of the her. is eloquent` of_7the magnitude of their task.j1,.7Imdbed,, that is one_ of_ the s__a1_ient ffatur'es"`J of each main episode .of` the M ' Nicholson" at Dlh~i,-';I-Ia.ve1o_k`t,.~;_Caw;;g9gg. `Delhi had fallen, and an oioer had told him that here was; a Major |4Malco1m` an N ieho].son s srta. That ;was all. Not a letter, not a sign, c e to reassure the` heart-broken gi 1, so the `joy of I-Iavelock e ar- rival was dimmed for her by the un- [certainty thwtjobtaineci in regard.- to her 1ove.r e fate. T . T _ Then the dreadful waiting began again. , After having endured a plague of heat in the hot weather, the -remnant of the original garrison in the months that followed. In Upper "India. the change of temper- ature` is so remarkably sudden that `it is incomprehensible to those who llive in more favored climes. Early | in Oo.t.nhm- the thm-m.-..m..+.... .c..'n... L- was- saubdeoted to the torment of cold . .-_`_-1-1.. `. : L`: hBED r1\TT11 A hunting Story | Al l!-...- -- - - ` -----_ IIIVI I o!llo_.mAoce*: 2' ,____ _ _ - Lovc uni venture` : : 3 : an ho.ui"later Malcolm enter- ed the Residency. At nst sight _it was an abode of sorrow. Death and. `ruin seemed to have combined there to wreak their spite on mankin`d and his belongings. Even the men and women whom he Tnaeb were tear-1ed- en, and it was not till he heard their happy voices that `he knew they were weeping, because of the overwhelm- ingrjoyi` in their souls. , 1 _ o - o 1_--_._. AJ `on n44uu-nus`:-man An A15 Air- uwl\T<:::t. `Captain Garnet Wolsely led -a. storming party against the Mo- _tce Mahal, and the self-sacricing heroism of the Shah Nudeef was dis- played again here and with the same res}11t.` - " 0. .'l 011 II 1. '. "11 kI.JRER. And so the wild ght went on, till Outraxm -and Havelock, Napier, Eyre,- Have1ock s son -and ' four other oic- ers ran from the Residency throughi ______ .._J. _.B 1--.! _L-_-...__`l -_. .|.L-__. e The `taking. of the Shah Nujeef alone was worthy of Homeric praise. -It was a. mosque that stood in a garden, bounded by a high and stout wall and protected by jungle and rnud .huove1s.- Its peculiar position, Jomedhto the number of guns` mount- ed on its .walls and the thousands of sepoysu who held it, made it impos- sible for a devoted artillery to create an effective breach. Yet, if the re- lieving force failed here, they failed altogether. So Sir Colin asked his `men for a. supreme effort. Riding forward himself, accompanied by his staff and sir Adrian Hope, Colonel of the 93d,_ hecheered on his loved Highlanders.` Cannot one hear the skirl of the pipes` amid that din of cannon and musket:-y? Cannot one see the shot-torn colors: uttering in the breeze, the "plaids of the gallant Highland gentlemen who the 93d, vanishing in the smoke and dust? Middletorfs battery of the Royal Artillery came dashing up, the drivers waving their whips, the gunners their caps, `unlinrbered within forty yards of the wall, and opened re with grape. Men and horses fell in scores, but somehow, anyhow, an entrance was. gained and the Shah Nujeef was taken. Feeble must be the pulse that does not beat faster, dim the eye that does not kindle, as one "hears how those Britons fought and died`, but did not gdienin vain. . I` .117 /V 1 `I I \4`LI3 lull in 11.1451 VJI`.l cl-U\a\YL\.I&AlI-\l. UJLA \I labs: a tempest of -,1eadsho.we.rexd on them from the Kaiser -Bagh, and Hope Grant, dashing forward from the van of Colin CaIn.pbe]1 s fame, shook "hands with the hero of the First I R`l'lef; ' 1 n `I I 1 `I 1115 JUJ' 1-IL mavaa oJvunJo I He hurried on, scanning each ex- cited group for one face that he thought he would` recognize were it fty years instead of ve months since their last meeting. He, of course, was even a ner-looking and better `set-up soldier now than when he -ga11~opedr along the ame-lit roads of .Meerut on that never-to-be-for- got-ten Sunday night in May,_ and it is not to be wondered at if he failed to." a1~lov5v for the eect on Winifred ' of the ordeal she gone through. Perhm his keen . eyes were cover- ed with a mist, perhaps the _ g'r0.w- n ins: fear in his heart forbade his ?ton2'ue to ask a question, because he dreaded the answer. Perhans sheer `agitation may have rendered "him in- ;oapa.ble of distinguishing one among ..- _..-...-. .T-TAnnnnA1fn.w Hnnt mnv `IR. The Mutiny was 1% no means end- ed with the fall of elhi and the Second _ Relief of Lucknow. North and south andfeaat and west the rebels were hunted with zeal. Sometimes in scattered bands, -less" often in formidable ammies, they %-`Danie U1 U1a`5lI1u5u.|Du1u5 vuu uuwq;b so many. Howsoever that may be, he knew ` nothmg,' saw no one, until `a. wan, slim-.g'uredA woman,. a woman- clothed-` in tattered rags, dqwn vghpse p-Va.ll10' (llluelis uurcaunvu uuv u..,.... tears of happiness, touched-`V his arm; a.-ndsobbedw - _ - A Are you looking for? me--`-de:ar? 1 IlUI'|V Luau Lu u-ulucr on-uqmxgxxa WUUIU. have _figured as independent battles, `each highly important in thehistory of the time. TIV`, A I 0 n . 1 ts: i -rv o A wavu gacvvuygo v Next "morning began a three d:ay s battle. Perhaps `there was never an. action so spectacular, so thrilling, so axnazingly in earnest, as the con- tinuous ght. which brought about the Second Relief of Lucknow. At` the'Alumbagh, at the Dilk-usrha and La. Marvtinieme school, at the Seoun- dew Bagh and the, Shah Nujeef, were fought ercely-contested , com- bats that in other campaigns would Lncns ....'......:I A- :.'...'I..__-_.J-_.-A. `L-LA-1A- g-----q -aurur uvuuucuw` 1w,uu-usureumuow he would compare as "a leader with the man whom they had left in-the little cemetery at the foot of the Ridge- ' - `It is on record that from the end of the line" came a yell of welcome recognition. ' The 93d High- landers remembered; what Campbell done in the Crimea, and their joyful slogan brought a. flush to the bronzed face of the old war dog when he learnt the signicance of] fzisvurerv kit` hen le stormed the Oashniere ion. .ikh Cavalry, too, `Hd5.0n-,8 Mild horsemen, and`. many another gallant .so1die1_g fresh from fh n-:.4xn-A -..L_-.__`- J L`. _ wv-ov van`/Q. -5-Llnlulb` _)C].,', I the immortal siege, returned 13: Gene:-al s quiet scrutiny, as he rode Past: and doubtless wondered how ht! I7l\.'l1`t` nnvmvunu- - .. `_ `-- J __ _-_!;`I_ _ers, who held the.x-mt ank `when the capture of Hindu R:ao s house would have meant the collapse of the assault. the em and) 75:1; Foot, the 9;] and 4+). D.....'..1.:- -11 AL--- ; I `n b% 'meansend:'- -1T - ` \n1-L; ` . until +1110 1oki:;_g Next HERNA .aox'A NcE? ..w.,. , I My dogcan-t is just coming u he said; and I -am going to the Chuttewr Mu-nzil. Won t you let me `drive you thcfre? CPL- 1.1___`I__ _, _`I 1 I) . 1. 1 n s'1`{efi)"1{Ish;i"Z.d hesitated; and of! course agreed. ` _ -On the way, to maintain a polite} u - gr. . _ ' Beingwa nice young man, the said! officer of the Gudes could not bear to see a nice young woman in dis- ._,_,, I v\.u- sucuz._n.b `UL 11611.1. (1. vCI':.lL|.=u.l .) . WOne day in February, not so long! ago, a young oicer of the Guides,j who had come to Luc_kno.w for Cup | week. was standing in the porch of`! the Mohamed Bagh Club when" he! heard a young lady bewailing fate: in the shape of a tikkagham-y Which` had? brought her there. Her people were ant. the Chutter` Mu-nzil Club, miles away, for Lucknow is a big. nlace, and she was already late for I-an But these are matters for the politician and the s;tate.s{Inan. It is more tting that this story of the. lives and fortunes of a few of the actors in a great human drama should. conclude with such particu- .!a.rs of their subsequent history as have ltered through time s' close- woven. -meshes of half a century. nu-an 11..-. :..` 'D..L..---..... ---L -~ 1--A- lblb Cf?` . I o - e great land of Hindustan has` `doubled its teeming population and increased its prosperity out of all: comparable reckoning during the fifty `years that have` passed since the Mutiny. Many of the descend- ants of -men who fought against the British Raj ax-e no,w its tzrustae-d= ser- vants, and there is not in India to- dayla native gentleman of any irm-= portance who would not` assist the Government with his life and for- tune to save his country. from the. lawless horrors of any similar `out-I kTl\lP elaivi of-you `the -Nepaul jun- gle,_t.he Honlyie of Fyzobad and the; Rancid of _`Jhana:i ten in action, while .Ta-ntia` Topi waelhanged, But the endeame, and on _November 1, 1858, amid ealvoesr of artillery and to the accompaniment of . festivities innuzmr ' erable, Queen Victoria. proclaimed- the abolition of the East India Com- pany, and assumed the sovereignty! of the coun1:r,y~. Her Majesty took no territory, conrmed all treaties,! promised religious Vtoleration .and| I um. civil equality to all her Indian sub- jects, and gave full and complete, pardon to every rebel who was not a murderer. ' . The Queen s gracious and peacea- wonds supplied` a tting close to India s Red Year. Europ mans nn 1'|.nf;I1oa, ..`I.'l,.. +..:..,i i- r-.. I --v-v vv a-uucuo JJUU. .L%1'oV IDUTUp'| eans and natives alike tried to for- get both the crime and its punish-I ment. ' And that was a good thing! in {fan}? 0 WE are told by the old-time circus men and dime-museum operators` that good freaks used to command large salar- ies. V Barnum s dog-faced boy is said to have drawn $200.00 a week-you see he was the only dog-faced boy in the world--he was unique. A _ Most of us`-even we could be freaks-would prefer to make our livelihood some other way. And, anyway, the freak stunt is about played `out-s--even in the circus business. Some manufacturers` -play freak only when talking to an advertising man. . They keep that WOM1 unique tucked back under the tongue all zrezpdy fol` Ause whenever anyone sug- They market a. 'pnodu.ct which their sales" manager was wont to refer as the haifdet thing in the world "to advertisfe. But a. persist- ent man fkept, ha1mmenr- J. 4.;-J4 SAID ON- IXES, UTY T-SO-

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