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Show A good many people think they know tbe original of Mark Twain's Mulberry Sellers. There were plenty of the Sellers family about a few years ago, and if Eaymond had put his creation on the stage at any time between be-tween 1SG5 and 1S71, half of an ftT-erage ftT-erage theatre-going audience might have regarded it as personal. We all have a Col. Sellers ha our memory, though, poor fellow, he charms us no more with his magnificent castles in the air, which were to make us millionaires. Now he has mostly re-. re-. . tired from public life, and let us hope has become a productive member of society, at least to the extent of raising rais-ing hia own turnips. |