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. r The Broad jfltk. nlti!8wl4 th of Bf mqr, set Straw , Pwtcataata, Kafekta at Later. Ia- BtyfcHctaiy Pritata, w taj i oaa acre tWr say, ae leas a tUr la ytaetr aad wafMirMtKy ta axed. Ax la a nupipa whece pt- Jataa Ja otaed waiwifc tar aa, ever rta?lr I lift te apeak lla aim sited. attaaa arm have a&eatioa; aa ma aMe of tee paper. SUBSCRIPTION: Oaa Tear .& SrKaatka I LSO sotae Meats .. JO Amount rates aaa&e known oa applies- AMreaa an iMjiiniuulcattca to THE BROAD AX, . 710 Mala Street. Salt Lata City, Utah. JTJLTCS r. TAYLOR.. Publisher and Editor. at Peatostea aa aecead-claaa autre Cashier Taylor of Argentine, Kaa., h dropped oat of sight. So hare the MaTfias funds of the bank. rerybedy seems to know just what VmTM B. Hill Is going to do every toijr bat David a himself. There Is a rumor that the powers wtO. reateastrate with the saltan over ate iMicti la Constantinople, but It k aetbeUered that they -will go farther . te think ef remonstrating. It It announced that In the national aasertera of one of tie political settles ae work -will he done oa Ban ters daring the campaign. This de frtw from previous custom trill not toot that party a single rote, and It ia increase the respect for a manage BMBt which recognises the fact that Jed's laws are not silent, even In the Ichttisa and tumults of a nataral can- A. Chicago Scotchman has been noti lei by the police to either sire up hatylng en his bag-pipes or more to ate eeuatry. It Is an awful thins te Iraas a loyal highland heart from the felered "doodlesack," but the alterna ktre ta even more crneL Who ever heard ef a hag-piper playing to a Unary stretch of woodland and mead Mr? -An audience seems to he aa essen tial thing for the best notes of the gay f i mn i at, Judging by the pompous aar ef the performer as he strides up and dewa la all" the glory of his chilly knees, shattered rainbow plaids and ireaely hrsahed sonny carls. lew sets an example to Boston. Att ar a discussion of three hours, the ttatae committee has decided that the keaatifal figure of "Iowa" Is perfectly prefer aad therefore the state will ac seat It The figure is nude from the waist vp and the hands support the anasts, signifying Iowa's offering of senrkhaseat to the whole world, sure ty a meet poetic and beautiful Idea. The faction against accepting the sta tae was led by Senator TTrin and lodge Trimble, but they have lost. Now let Boston accept the Bacchante statue. aad let aa in the name of all tit fe Veaatifal in art. and all that is nau peeaa la mock-modesty, put an end to sals sort ef thing for all future time. i leeks aa If the Turkish empire ere approaching a point where Its tether existence would be impossible. at la to he hoped that such is the case. prarMed a stable form of gOTemment ana take Its jlaee. In Syria the Drases are waging a successful war against Bm national troops; la Crete the ln aasitaats are aghtlag the Invaders, aftHtag hack oa their mountain fast- i whea defeated; la Macedonia the tehabltaats have raised the ef revolt, while Armenia, is kaythJag hat tranquil. There are other regions that wfll he found la tea rebellion whea revolts in ether parts ef the empire become more sarestoatog. The Arabs of the Arah-iaa mlsrnls hare always beea dissatls Sed with the rale ef the Turks, aad have mere than once In the past cea latlus fen to arms and made head Iff at the family ef othmaa. They are aeM dowa sow fey force ef arms. T that feree alone. They do net Hiacd the present head ef the empire a doserriag to he the head priest ef vaate Moslem world. The treahles rttk the Christian l Crete may lead m mere widespread aaaeaTala t .- taaaeated. T TJalted States ceaaal-geaeral at aa ais mat resort. eaOa at. at the great Increase that has la tae aredacrlaa r a ad the high price it aceoaat ef ite mw. aapaaliRy for wrappla i?! lateeetiac partica aiecte engiaaad rrewth mt t tm. Itwae la the nu- is v. Arah drew the attaatieai at la Bataria ta tk t ef Detf. aa the east m -, a Breek Standard kreasd atarket eeald Jaaad "y ; Tale lei to a "naaaralai acpeamiea to Dal Mane. IMt. -a-aiirti . n mi 'aaaamm-aaaak., ..nwaa awmaaaama Bm3PVBtt0Bm VaC wJV Waal lam. XMSal amaVm MfisBmmT 'VbAbUbBb If mMaa BBBnamtJ2k -. B 'Ikfk BjaWsftA-Ha & jmaaamawama aU.t "t f " 'toaatr jwried wm'J 1-ia ay a firm J ilB.aaaBlatvtirrfeaM aata tamaaaair aavaaaJ u B5e44ar- GfiAKP AND SILYER. HIS 8PECHAL MESSAGE FAVOR 1NQ FREE COINAGE. Wa Want AB tka SBnr la CtrralaUaa That CM Ba Cotaad Ordara As attlaaal FaeHKlea for Sttataga Wa afasraat of Daaaonetl: There are stm seme men who Insist that the act demonetizing silver was not sneaked through Congress in 1873. Time and again the stiver advocates have given substantial evidence to the contrary. The late James G. Blaine, who was speaker of the house of rep resentatives In 1S73. has been quoted times without number. Other illustri ous statesmen of all parties have testi fied to the truth of Blaine's statement that "Not a member of congress knew at the time that the act of 73 demone tized silver." Neither did President Grant, who signed the bllL Here is bis special message to the senate on the day he signed the resumption bill. No sane man. after reading it, will dare to say that President Grant knew that the set nf 1K7.1 rieharred silver from the I mints. The message: -To the Senate of the United States: Senate bill No. 1044, "to provide for the resumption of specie payments." is before me, and this day receives my signature of approval. I venture upon this unusual method of conveying th notice of approval to the house on which the measure originated because of Its great importance to the country at large and in order'to suggest further legislation, which seems to me essen tial to make the law effective. The provisions of the third section of the act will prevent combinations be ing made to exhaust the treasury of coin. With such a law it is presumable that no gold could be called for not required for legitimate business pur poses. When large amounts of coin should be drawn from the treasury, correspondingly large amounts of cur rency would be withdrawn from cir culation, thus causing a sufficient strin gency in currency to stop the outward flow of coin. The advantages of a currency of a fixed, known value would also be -cached. In my opinion, by the enact ment of 6uch law, business and indus tries would revive, and the beginning of prosperity on a firm basis would be reached. Other means of Increasing revenue than those suggested should probably be devised, and also other legislation. In fact, to carry out the first section of the act. another mint becomes nec essary. "With the present facilities for coinage, it would take a period prob ably beyond that fixed by law for final specie resumption to coin the 6llver necessary to transact the business of the country. There are now some smelting fur naces for extracting sliver and gold from the ores brought from the moun tainous territories, in Chicago, St. Louis and Omaha three In the former city and as much of the change re quired will be wanted in the Mississippi valley states, and as the metal to be coined comes from west of these states, and as I understand the charge of transportation of bullion from either of the cities named to the mint in Philadelphia or to New Tork city, amounts to $4 for each $1,000 worth. with an equal expense for transporta tion back. It would seem a fair argu ment In favor of adopting one or more of those cities as the place or places for the establishment of new coining facilities. I have ventured upon this subject with great diffidence, because it Is so unusual to approve a measure as I most heartily do this, even if no fur ther legislation Is attainable at this time and to announce the fact by mes sage. But I do so because I feel that it is a subject of such vital importance to the whole country, that it should re ceive the attention of and be discussed by congress and the people, through ine press and In every way, to the end that the best and most satisfactory- course may be reached of execut ing what I deem most beneficial legis lation oa a most vital question to the interests aad prosperity of the nation. TJ. S. GRANT. Executive Mansion, Jan. 14. 1875. On motion ef Mr. Sherman, the mes sage waa referred to the committee oa finance aad ordered to be printed (See Coagres&ieeal Record, volume 3, part 1. Forty-third congress, second' session, Dec. 7, 1875, page 459). The above Is aot the only sabstaatial evidence that General Grant waa Ig norant ef the whole proceeding. Fol lowing is eae he wrote two yearn pre vious te Us Secretary ef the Interior Believing that aOver might stIH he' taken te the mints aad coined tree ef caarg. ae wrote: "I weader that aOver is not already eemlag lata the market to aapply the deficiency la the circulating -rlnm Bxperieaea has proved that k takes sheet mM .toe ef fraetiaaal carreacy to make the small change mee easary far the transaction ef the eaat aeaaeftheeeaatry. SQverwgra aafiy take the nteee-et this earreacy a farther, wffi aeceme the standard ef vetoes, xlaa wOI Ae hearded ta a aaaaM way. I aafiante that talc wS eeaaaaae Sreaa MMN.Me to paafi.. Mi to tame at tarn saedes etrZL to a dinar to aee Merited baardtoe; ef SaSaarttLSw " art ef toe taewertdew. Wveria this. shall we do with Itr I here m efntXV a solution which will answer fi years to pat It la circulation. It there until It Is fixed, and th will find other markets. (Extract a letter written by President Gran Mr. Coudry. Oct. 13. 1873. eight m after he had signed the bill deraonefi- Uxing silver, not knowing what that measure contained. See page 203, Con gressional Record. Dec. 14, 1877). Can any one doubt the sincerity of General Grant? If there Is let him -rote for McKinley and the gold standard. Did ntmatallUn Saed? New York Journal: A monometallist contemporary quotes the Journal's re mark that bimetallic coinage Is not aa untried experiment, but was an ap proved success through the greater part of our national life, and exclaims: How was it "an approved success?" Did it ever for one month maintain the parity of the metals? Did It ever dur ing the forty years of its existence give us concurrent circulation of gold and silver? If so, when? Did this magical ratio ever do either of these things In any other country? If so. where? On the Tery same page our contem porary prints a table that ought to en able It to answer its own questions. The figures show the relative produc tion of silver and gold. For the pres ent century the outputs as given, were: Gold. Ounces. 1801-10.. 5.715.627 1811-20.. 3.679.568 1821-30.. 4.570.444 1831-40.. 6.522.913 Sllrer.. Ounces. 287,469.225 59 to 1 173.SS7.555 43 to 1 148.070.040 32 to 1 191.758.675 30 to 1 250,903.422 12 to 1 287.920426 4tol 329.267.776 Stol 2.513.9S4.119 17 to 1 1841-50.. 17.605.018 1851-60.. 64.4S2.923 1860-70.. 61.098.343 1870-95.. 146.539,875 If this table had been supplemented by another exhibiting the market value of the metals. It wou!d have shown that while In the first seventy years of the century the production fluctuated so enormously that In one decade only four ounces of silver were produced to one of gold, and In another the dispar ity was fifty to one. the average an nual market ratios ranged for almost the whole time in the neighborhood of 15H to 1. and nerer varied more than from 15.04 to 1 to 16.25 to 1. It would also have shown that while the pro duction from 1S70 to 1895 approached more nearly to the mint proportions than ever before in the century, the value of silver fluctuated between 15J57 and 32.56 to L "Concurrent circulation" is not the test of a successful monetary policy, al though there was never a year la times of spede payments between 1803 and 1874 when silver five franc pieces and goldYwenty franc pieces did not circulate together in France, and when both gold and silver were not coined at the French mints. The real test ts stability of value. It makes little dif ference whether one metal or the other or both be In circulation if the fluctu ations in value can be kept within nar row limits. Between 1837 and 1873 the gold value of 371Vi grains of pure silver never averaged more than SL053 or less than SL003. The range of fluctu ation was less than five cents on the dollar in thirty-six years. Between 1873 and 1895 the gold value of the same amount of silver varied between 49.1 cents and 3L004. There was a greater fluctuation in a week than there had been with open mints in sev enty years. That ought to answer the question whether the policy of open mints proved a success or not, as com pared with the one that has followed it. 1 TbU "Soand JtoaajV Springfield (Mass.) News: The paper and silver currency of the United States amounts to something over ?1, 100.000,000. According to the "sound money" men this currency Is redeem able in gold. The redemption bureau is supposed to be in the federal treasury. What are Its gold assets to meet Its self-imposed obligations? Less than 5100.000.000. Its assets are, if Its esti mate of liabilities is sound, about nine per cent of its liabilities. If this is "sound money" heaven deliver oa from it. As a matter of cold fact, the govern ment Is not bound to pay one penny more In gold than its present reserve provides for. It Is only because the bankers of two worlds have been pat ting In their work to their own profit, that the fallacy of gold redemption has been given a moment's countenance. In order to maintain a pretense of solv ency on this basis the government has run the country In debt by selling $200,000,000 worth of bonds simply aad only to maintain a vanishing gold re serve. If the policy was to he kept up. as would be necessary under this same policy, the government debt would he Increased at the rate of at least S1M. eeo.tte per year. It would aot he leag before ear debt would he as great as It waa at the close of the civil war, net mach longer before the total cast ef maiatalalag this blessed geld stand ard weald he aa great as the -whale tremeadoaa outlay reeaked to pat dowa seeeasioa aad preserve the aaiea. This is what seaad De yea want It? Kataaiaau VHaaat St. Leeis Chroaicle: A eosaHeiaLle ef people are aetUagm -t- aheUs which he who twaa bm: hftteaded to prove that th free a a&rar M ml the arc gtttiac to me that the aiagie gaM aaaAard te a atari of the yMWrwat tvhtea C r a Dlfferenc vJ RaHat flv - ? l S .. V - I J .1 7 11 Til -ttm 1J fi ii Jr -rritVti 1 jj4 j, ;-- TELLE J - T "ZZT CZ ,- .f f . 7 ? mud wTil riJllil'ikJllJiri f-c" "'i I 5S?JIBi r ori. I UMII'I Vslal K MTAll we L'riSfiWSSs ITS mmJ. VwAOwaWt 1 sVaiBb tBaBmaBmaamrJal 1 v H.i--i a4ffPmt 1 BWJuJ ALL AGAINST SILYEE. COAL. BARONS FORCE DOWN AND PRICES WAOES UP. Tat Ttiey Prtad tbat Thar Ara AfimM That th Wrklr Kaa WUl Ba Paid la Cheap DolUn-Tba Ckleago Irt haaa "Ordr& Up." The following letter was recently ad dressed to the Chicago Tribune. That paper boasts that it answers all let ters received. It evidently 'made an exception of this one for the very good reason that its publication would have opened the eyes of a large number of the Tribune's readers. We publish It that its influences may not be lost: Editor, Sound Money column, Chica go Tribune Sir: its not a fact that J. Pierpont Morgan, who is at the head of the gold movement in this country. and who recently made a profit of $3, 000.000 on a bond transaction (which transaction was only made necessary because we are on a gold basis, and in sist on paying our obligations In gold). Is also at the head of the anthracite coal trust; which trust has recently raised the price of that article for no known reason whatever except Its own voraciousness? Is It not also a fact that Senator J. M. Thurston, one of the leading supporters of the gold party, is the paid attorney of the Union Pa cific railroad, a corporation which has robbed the United States government of millions of dollars? Did not the Union Pacific make every SHERMAN'S Sherman's plea for labor In the sen ate of the United States In 1S76: We are producing in this country this year, as estimated by Dr. Linderman, some $40,000,000 in sIlTer bullion. He esti mates the total production at 5S0, 000.000. of which $40,000,000 will be silver. Why not utilize this silver as legal tender? I admit that If It is made a legal tender, equal to gold, it being a metal not so valuable, it would drive the gold from the country, and the sil ver alone would remain. By limiting it to a thousand dollars In one payment, ninety-nine transactions out of every one hundred will be transacted with it. And all business between individuals not bankers, between the mechanic and employer, between farmers and their vriu then commence and no one knows merchants, and all wages, and Indeed better than the worklngman how diffl thousands of transactions which under- cult It is to get an advance nf nay lie society broad and deep, would be In this coin. The large transactions between the bankers and those between this and foreign nations would con tinue to be In gold, but the silver would remain here as the cola of the people, and the laboring man as well as the small dealer, and indeed of all uiose persons wno oo not deal in mil- Ilons at a dip. I therefore. Mr. President. look upon thls as one of the great steps toward resumption. It is by utilizing the-sil- er f hlch we produce In large amounts In this country and making It a legal tender s It was heretofore. It re mains a legal tender in France, and it ls there successful as the coin of the . .a many other parts of Europe. France t5 !fcf rertf,e" nUof- sad they have retained the double dird: and from my reading I be- yV Sf"7 .?Uld ?. ! m? ,t"nldJlo1lt ost cheerfully. They believed that the Lug. amount of Freach coin which had been brought there la a day would re- ,im..nZ.,wZ;,. tiled all the aillloas of sllrer that had beea coined all the little principalities and duchies of Germany for ages be fore and substituted gold ezcluslrely, recoining the French cola so as to make It the coin of the empire. But this ImDerial coin must ro baea- ta Its Imperial heme; aad. I said a while ago. R has left that coaatry la a cea- dltlea of paralysis aad rieetratle. aot surpassed by Its aad eoadltlea d-rlag the Napeleoalc wars. It aheald he re- celred as a todaaatal fact te guide the statesjBea ef this eeaatry that the reverses what hS always salts us. Aad ae the azelaelve gold standard nadonhtedOy salts her. the doable sUadard soils bs. See Ceagreseleaal Record, Harsh f, lfTC, 1413 to IW. esTert peesihle to elect Tharstoa to the seoate. fcnowtoa; fan weS that Ks rasealKy waa ahomt to he ezpeeed. aad of nstttattoa rateedr Is k not alee a tost that the amaihen d every eae of the wWak are tost irtT. tog aoaaoecKioa front the ae)d aa4 rais toe she prlee at every arUaie iaor ace. OC tae sosaa aU oartr? WHY WE OPPOSE THEM. . Ballkfc "CenservaUva-M-thed. of Certain National Bank occasion, Bhould now hare the Interest ef a long-suffering public at heart? It looks to me that, having always robbed the worklngman In the past, they wish to continue to do so In the futnre. Maybe I am wrong. I sincerely hope bo. It Is with that hope In my mind and a wish to be further enlightened, that I pen this lengthy epistle to youj relying on your well-known fairness to answer through the columns of your paper. RICE WASBROUGH. Rapabllcaa Official (or SUrar. Buffalo (N. T.) Times: United States Commissioner Henry D. Fitzgerald, a life-long republican, who has taken the stump for the republican party In western New York every presidential election since the campaign of Greeley and Grant, has come out fiat-footed for Bryan and free silver. Not only does he Intend to vote for the ticket, but he says. If necessary, he will take the stump for It. Commissioner Fitzgerald spoke at scores of republican meetings throughout western New Tork during the campaign of '88. He has been United States commissioner for the past 27 years, during which time he has been of great service to the party. Baarka aa a Bird. Oil City Derrick: For a professional jaw-worker like Cockran to refer to the agriculturists as "farmers who labor with their Jaws" Is an excellent illus tration of the pot calling the kettle black. Bourke is a bird. It would be Interesting to know the exact price he was paid for his speech. TWO SPEECHES. John Sherman's plea for labor at Columbus in 1896: But by far the greatest injury resulting from the free coinage of silver will fall upon workingmen. Their wages are now based upon money of the highest value, upon gold coin of standard value. Un der free coinage of sliver the value of the silver dollar will fall to 53 cents in gold, or, as I have already said, the hundred cents of the gold dollar will be worth 190 cents of the silver dollar. With free coinage of silver every work lngman can and ought to demand enough silver for his daily wages to be equal to the purchasing power of his present wages In gold. Tia ati-n- rie between worUneman an t,. we nave strikes and striie enough now, when the worklngman get3 his pay in gold coin or its equivalent, but what will be the condition when he Is paid la cheaper money of the same nominal amount, but of less purchasing power.' javery sentiment of Justice will be on the side of the worklnnnar. in his struggle for good money brin- creased wages In cheap money. Of all the evils which a government can in- flict none can be greater than cheaD money, whether of coin n,-,. ine question will never be settled until you determine the simple ques tion whether the laboring man la en titled to have a gold dollar if he earns it, whether you are going to cheat nim wim something else. Gold has ,. vorli t ,t to The English people once thought they oul& get along without gold for a while, but they had to come back to It h the free coinage of sllvmr gold win he demonetised. Nothtojoihe Hore ct that net ffioaey only will circulate. , S Sutaa has thus far mai-tafned ItTsS- "5 f03 " PW tn W coins only by Its exeluslTe monopoly of coin age and by limiting the amount, but with free coinage of sIlTer there could be no llBaltatioa. sUrer bullion la every form will be pressed upon the miata and wHfc tfc m..j.i . , . " ..T"1 r1"10 HIT tTe SSrS ?!" JTT &ULuSiS aeSS-, Seted ui M I aiTtlS JS ? alrTiitavTcoffVi! ver wm stod aTttTvfr 15Z&Z Tame. s tT Sv coercial S&jE? "" " im' . CataWa CX. Yj Becordcr: The meoale O atote. Xajor Hlnto JTS! sah before dedaria their 7' , -. If esaee ct their W.V i- ai aaa lace TfcaXeasarHy ef Traea. America does aot seem as faToriL to the longevity of trees as are maaj parts of the old world. It Is said tBat pines In the north of Europe are knoa to hare endured for nearly 500 yea In BararU there Is a larch which b known to be 225. Many oaks In c. many are known to be over 300 yean. Of other trees Individuals are kno, that have reached the ages set opp elte to them: Ash, 170 years: bin 1G0 to 200 years; aspen, 220 yean mountain maple, 225 years; elm, 13 years;, and red alder, 145 years. In our country there are few xl are more than mere remnants. Most of Bartram's trees are gone wholly w are fading; The famous cypress hy yet a few green branches. The fiat sllrer fir oa the Johnson estate fa German town, which figured in the early Issues of "the Hortlculturlsraaj often elsewhere, is entirely dead no though less than 100 years old. Me! ban's Monthly. A Cessna Experiment. In the rjcent census of the countj of London the occupier of a tenement handed ft blank paper to the collector with a confused statement that It did not apply to her. "And where do you lire, then?" asked the bemuddled enn merator, after a long struI to dij entangle the witness. "Where do I lire? Why, where should I live but la my own ome" "Well, where Is yanr home?" 'This is my 'ome. of coarse It Is." "But yon said Just now that you didn't sleep here last nIsV - x0 more I did. I nerer slept a in.nme all night long, and my 'uslwnd 11 tell 'e the same." Household Words. Sarcastic. "There's one thing;" remarked Willie WIshlngton, "that I'Te made up my mind to do." "Really?" responded Miss Cayenne with languid interest. Tes. I shall never be a man of one Idea." "Don't say that. You are still too young to be discouraged." Washing ton Times. Insect KUlUc Toi'h. A device for destroying millers and preventing the spread of fruit worms Is coming Into quite general ue among cranberry growers on Cape Cod It consists of a torch mounted on a pole which is left burning through the night The millers are attracted By the blaze and fly Into It. St. Louli Globe-Democrat. A SInoI&r Form of Monomania. There Is a class of people, nzizi, tzizz'i in otner respects, wbo are ceru..y smo maniacs la dosing themselves. Tiej an.- caa suntlr experimenting npoa their sjosucIl their oowela, their livers and the.r fc.!ncri with trashy nostrum. Whea tba orgizi are really oot of order. If they wssM ocJ txse Hostettera Stomach Ureters, they tosh. If not hopelessly Insane. perceiTo its ss periorlty. 'That yoan? widow next door has boc?i: a bicycle." "Isn't that a little odd'" -."w: the says she had to hare It so she cotii carry flowers out to the cemetery." ETerjbodr Wants it. At least every one does who wants to MTe money. Send for It. The Golden a;'e Catalogue for Fall and Winter. Sent free, and costs yon absolutely nothing. Twin save yoa money on Dry Goods. Cloats. Jill, llnery. Shoes. Uojs' Clothing and Groceries. Beady Sept. 15. lon't fall to get one aU we want yon to do U to send jour name. we'll do the rest. The Golden Eagle, comet Sixteenth and Lawrence Sts.. DenTer. Colo. "Congratulate me. old boy at last I'm on the top round of the ladder of scceesi." "Well, here's to you; but I'll bet yoa got there by turning It upside down." Great Safes naturally result from the great mem wh!ca makes the thocsaads of wonderful cures bl Hood's Sarsaparilla Tb Oae True Blood Purifier. AD drugsists. It Hood's PiHsccrean Ltver Ills. 3 ceia -THE- Josi Dry Ms Ca DENVER, COLO. .Y2 Aidrosfor Xr a Fall Catalogue. Oeer tOO .Vcw Stylet n CLOAKS, ETC. larin 3la Orders 11 CJJ. D0MT OWE GET Mii WET. SBRM FISH BRAND SLICKERS WILL KEEP YOU Dltt tmUTL Xaeenxai vuuiUtonm- .a. PATFWTX CLAIMS. a" 7. " hi in ii m jii i -j m ff7& I -aaaaW 2!?BJLCURK m piles - 'aaia. aaaninraniii r- tlMao" I ca. ii'aiia r aB Salt Veriaas. R, W.X,BMaa, VaLXIasV 3Sa.3S-Ti -2FS.2toa a-aalaata. aeaaa say ttaT ItBotseom atraoMtaiht the a other te the feet aaat set ctbi a or that the Jaw ar awaiaowv atffi. th atdttm it. - Jeiy o-rto-771 or say aTW , K to eaatoMd aevtoaoi eeeC . " -,, .. . . !. waaaaamaia: awawaae maaanma. 3 T toe laalaaMj v a asaaiaoaaa