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S d'twmton.A I I losses in 1 hi- iivance rate»B» »w* W»M« 401subscriptions Three month*«•»} ittsTBota one year il.60, Invariably PMwr and not ordering l^JES&SSSSSSiS HWSSSi. P/ CoVrespoud«noc (rom all parts ol 'u« county '§'1laU&lSed. Postage expanse of the late »plete up to the next election there will be little need of'havingany Demo cratic jlicy in 1904. Republican. "Present J. Bryan claimed gr»y PuIDAT AT WOBTfUKO TO*. Minsssota. engagements is about success. The solutely honest tha sa n* will TO pMidbr the publisher. ^Whenpossible items tor pubUcatlau 'hould Kaebtbw offloe on Tiudtf of tbe *eek of isSSSS*"^ standing MtTertlaemeow made k. «own on application. I(1ocaS'*dTerU»«ine^it»*6' eent» per llnf each •ertlon. The more The Hague arbitration court is referred to makes Tuiiyersal :r' peace proposition ad an tor national The nearness are distressing. It is a cruel fate to thus lose brave men who have borne tbe brunt hard campaign ing that to result in com- Kansas farmers are beginn ing to worry over the problem of securing a sufficent number of Daen to harvest their wheat. It has not occurred to them to try the advertising Commoner.—Washington Post. It is now hard to I" can be any othwoutcomc than ff mal repudiation of the .Democrats Senator Vest He is right. Democracy lives off of calamity. When it can't emit a calamity wall now and then it dies.—Benton.111., .. prosperity is a delusion or at least ephemeral" says us some (Mo,) ftepublij|p," The success of Wm. ill a That's late interview. so, life is uncertain, death sure, riches have wings, to be cloudy some day. but not withstanding all this these little delreor.s, like five-cent hogs, hun dred-dollar horses, twenty-dollar calves, ten-cent cotton and twenty five cent wool, are such pleasing delusions that the majority of the people are ready to cry: "Please delnde Prof. Coe of the Northwestern university in hypnotizing three members of his class opens up $ new prospect in the work of education. If im pressions made during tbe hypno tic trance are lasting, what is keep the proffessor from cramm ing a whole science into a subject head before he wakes there not reason May we bim up? Void—express an idea good. They will make their Is to hope, not that students who have no brains may be successfully educated, but that a student of good parts may 4)6 prepared fcr graduation in a week not hope for the time when a whole university course will be slipped into a student's mind as quickly and as While admitting that certain slang phrases ipo Cfrioagwvbw thct $1^000 pria*offew$ by Mrs. Nancy Itving to t^e ab wan proves modesty is.still one of the pal characteristics of our citizen^ Mr. Edison claims to have dis covered a process of making an excellent cement so cheap that, mixed with three parts of sand and five of broken stone cement, a concrete will be formed of which houses can be built as if made of the most expensive stone, and more cheaply than of wood The college-bred wife has a fair start in life as a body that for peace, the bigger the glooms joke. of peace in the with her college lusband. She possesses the in comparable advantage of being a suitable companion of her sons and daughters in their larger world of aspiratidn and ambition Nor is such culture to be had within colleges exclusively. Many of the most accomplished wives and mothers acquired thoir culture in private study, the better in re sults for the greater effort necess ary in its acquisition,, The college that will not fit a -woman- better wife is to be be a see how there the Bryan by and his'disappear ance politics except as a minor political and social agithtor.—Sen Francisco Cbrohicle. Says better- husband.—Chicago Chronicle. colnmns of the Our foreign comniprcial rivals are becoming keenly alive the United was if the pros perity we now enjoy is continued no doubt that the industrial progress made by the United States during the recent period of been exceedingly rapid. The United States is a country fapidly be*Mai$ng devoted to the expecta tion of industrial products withr out, however, decreasing the portation it's of sure as to enable it to compete with Eng land in the world's markets. To day this is an' accomplished fact." When more."—Clinton .we consider prosperity in all branches of busi ness, has been brought about by maintenance of Protection for a teim ef years, it would seem to be the height-of folly to undertake a change in the at this time.— Camden^ J^.J.tariff Pob* of board of self.murderers easily as the cartridges are slipped into the magazine of a modern rifle?—Chi cago Chronicle. may enrich the language and that the difference between a living and a dead ]rngu~ge i's the presence in one and the absence from the other of new werds, a protest must be entered against a too liberal use of unauthorized creations. There are sli. i»g words thai fill the mayor and health of Emporia Kansas, to forbid publication in the newspapers of that city suicide is an imitation ot route. The New York to promote crime a distinct better than any recognized phrase. They wretches in are as ?^it Is ulgar *'p fex6ept to meaningless defile.- It ought not be difficult the ara.treated as heros wav into polite speech. But there is a,type of slang as that has no function to to distinguish between two—encouragihg one, reject ing the other.—Pittsburg igatcL ».a- is eftaced bytreah the unique method# kidnappers have betrn adopted cranks iA all parts of explains the to one of 45 to the menace of tbe industrial'advance ment of States. It is only of late that our British cousins and our. German loerial foes woald admit that their trede imperilled by American advancement in t.he world's mark ets. But here we iind Dr. Carl Ballod, a German authority cn trade etatittits, djfccne6ir« at length the growth of the American export trade and concluding that "there can be th0 ''United-) States, and sumou9.\ipoi&.th^>ri^ have been served atvarioy^points by miscreants who threWel^ indulge in kidnaping or in murder if their demand This tendenoy- and police offioials.—Bdilwrankfce Evening Wis. resolution was York system great economic prosperity has and has ex its agricultural pro ducts. Even lateas ten years ago nobody believed thai America within calculable time would be able to produce iron so cheaply as front of New York's prohibition of the print ing of sensational acconuts of the xecution of criminals. Emporia is experiencing an epidemic of suicide, and as there would be whose designs were frustrated had adopted a method which had been successful in a nu mber of recent cases of suicide in Kmporia, the authorities have concluded that the reading accounts of oi suicides has a tendency to prompt the mentally weak and the despondent to seek relief from their imagined woefrby suicide statute in regard to reports of electrocutions is based upen the vtew that the reading of such matter by. the mentally deficient has a tendency amohg those who are weak enough to envy the "murderers' rbw*'.who by emotional boquet throwers. There is undoubtedly a': strbng tendency toward imtiation among the mentally weak of the criminal class. Most crimes of Dis a startling nature are followed by occurrences of a similar nature. The aesassi nation of a ruler imperils the lives of other rulers until the incident |$ Wu WflP&Avt? A '"H— When at the Boston cbnyeniion of the natiQual association manuacturers, one year df ago, 4 passed re^maten ing the ratification of the pending reci procity treaty with France there was earnest 'discussion -fi» oppsition: -^On' Wediiesdsy. lasj when the same sidered at the ^Detroit con ventioci]: there was but one voice would injurioa to. be can condetd ned precisely as thd' college is to be condemned that does not fit a man to \rftised 'it protest, a representative knit goods 5f industry, that the 20 who'^olarei per peot duties provided o| iii tlie Fren^ 1biri^ O affect Ameri manufacturers.v-His pbjeetio^ appears to. be bas^lpjpart, hoW« even upon the provision- in thi^ Dingley law, imposing duty per cent ou That there is less o1 knitting n4a6hineiry,i which must be* impend.— adelphie^Ledger. Phil now for a man to r,ise from th$| ranks into leader ship than th0rc|j was yesterday the opponents the American industrial oj system areT proving daily to their own satis| faction by the grace of reitera' asseveration. Tbat there is morife opportunity, as well as a riche^ reward, is being proved every da^ by the grace of reiterated fac The New Central Riilroai —one of the by that this gratifying growth in our export trade, as' well as the phenomenal easily Telegram. Tbe attempt to half doza: system* of the world—h just called its presidency William .{Newman,-of Clevelai a man who began his career a^ switchman and telegirapti dpdr^tpri fa°en coming Vp tb^ lin^ steadily from one position' td another, Tha huge steel trust, as haB already been noted, has, in Charles M. SchtfSb, a youn man at its head who begai near the bottom not so long ago. man like these /Every who comes to the his own uaaided effort not only gives tha lie to woald disc^arags their as well as those who fellpws by celling them they have no chance, but blazds a broad path, in which others may follow him the m?re the more hope- fully.—B jstpn Transcript,\ .ML ORDER POR tf AklNG AP^IrfiC A'fTtON for APPOINTMBMT'of ADM INrSTRAtOR. Stateof MtnneSdta,tountyof Nobiei.ss. In Probate Court, Special Ter.m, j'une 5th, 1901. ta the Matter of Bstate of WlUiam Titter ington^ Deceaaed: On Recelvlng and filing the petition of Bd win C. Wilton, ode of the attorneys f'Ot the heirs of said deceased ofthe county of gobies representing, atnon^ other things, that William Titteringtori, tate oftlie County of Palo Alto, in the stat of Iowa, on, the 0th day of November,. A. D.« 1900, at the County of Palo Alto. State of fowa, died tnteetate, tearing goods, cHatteis, and eatatey irfltljln this Conaty. oan t.iat the Isald pjtlttoaer is one of tbe attorneys for the heir* of sata de ceased, ttad praying th it administration of said estate be to Sarah Bralth«alteand J',.H. Has* granted O It ls Ordered, That aald patitlon be heard befoi« said Court, oa Tuesday, the 3nd day of July, A. D. 1901, at one o'clock p. m., at the Probate Office, idi, the :C6itrt Btotwe in Worthlngton In said County.- Ordered Further.Tliat notice thereof be glvin to the heirs of said decease 1 and to all persons interested, by publl»Ulng this order once in each week for tniree successiye weeks prior.to said day of hea/ing, in the, Worth lngton Advance a weekly newspaper print ed and published at Worthlngton in said County. Dated at Worthlngton, Minn., the &th day of June. A. D. 1901. SBAL By the Court", it of County of Probate Cc^rt, Special Tei^ua. Jnfte 18^ tie MWter ol'^Ws-^taiep.rilonnr ttera.o'f Adj4l«aitratR»fi^ki ris order. were, not Wfc- towardimitation "wave crime Monday theory1' of often discussed by reporters fiC'dne l/ C. M. Cory. June the ... Judge of,Pr.oSate. \TV. r-21 Summons for Railed C^oraplaiut 1 Plled-^i 'i State of Minnesota, County Of Nobles, ss.' District Cottrt,' 13th Judicial District. George Ltkrtiplalt^ifl against Jacob Spill man, Niels C^Frtderllcsen -'and Stephen T. Rawson, defebdants. The State,-. Lof Minne^otai To:'the above named defendants:' You are hereby Summoned and required to answer the complalht.of tlie.PllaitrtlH' f* the above entitled actioni Whlch ls Sled In the offite of the Olerk Of the District Court of the 13th Judicial District Ift ailtt for: t&e Ccrhtity of gobies ^nd State of^ Miitneaot'C and to sar ve a cofiy of your ansWer to the^ald cotti plainton tljesubsci-ibfcr, ait'his •oflrie In the Village of. .Worthington'tar sftld^ 'rCourity, within twenty days after.the. service of this •ummotiS tipon you, e*iluislve of the day of such service ana If you fall ^to ansWer the said complaint witnio the .tints aforesaid, the Plaintiff In this action wilt apply to the Court for the relief^demanjded In the com plaint. '}, ••'.l.v. Dated May 33, 1901. .•••• '.oicttSL Plaintiff's Attomey. Worthington, 'Minn, may 34 jane 3S r"1 h, the Monday th^ 7th day of October, 19Q1. November, of December, "11)01, at oneo'cloek p. i». ,U 19 Further Orders Further Ordered. Tkat six minth» its satisfaction", ^.hail he forever barred, less, for caule »howa, further tltns Tie al- iwed. Ordered Further, Tiiat notice of- the time place of tbe h'earinjf and examination of ciaim and demxnda shall be, given by '.oablishinx this order oaee in eacU Week, for •SVee successive weeks prior to'tlie dav ap iiblt: )iev to loai oa Jf.-irn. laQd^ at wrv 7rv per cent. Geioj, W. Wilsan & Sonv'^ ..««{ Sf. Worthingtou, Minn. Fur Infkiits uii CIldlaMt ki Kind YoaHanAlwaysBwgh! Bean 't&» ^Wgaatore of *bpporunity| CRIMB TO PLAY EUCHRfc !on»t«ruatloo AmoOf: yptarl«$ ot CAfdi to $ecti6n of Georgia* ft is a crime to play progressive ||ttchre in Georgia. So holds a grave 'ind learned judge of. a superior court tbat section. His name is Fite, and saya he wlil live up to it until all euchre players have been driven of the business. As a consequence Is consternation among the vo ries of the right and left bower. Fite makes no distinction be ,een the ladles and gentlemen who, ittired in the height of Georgia fash meet in their drawing ttjoins and a pleasant evening at euchre, and droOHng inustached hal)itues of the .nt" in a ^l^ferent part of the ?£lftytng »uchra tor. iprts^ta^a to- giye eg»l phrttfeolo^," sAys tb^JFudge, addition to fhat^it 1$ amoral e. I intend to break up the prac-. e. -as tar as my_ Igluence^ tpujsu2cfr of this policy, Judge Fite '"playing no favorites." He has ed all. his personal friends around S&3 and' Remarked' to them that they mustn't play euchre for prises. He has ructed. the grand Jury to be unre llig in Its Investigations, and to urn true bills against all persons playing at the prohibited game. W!$& he can find no legal precedent suppressing gambling in one form allowing it to flourish in a differ guise. I S a A of the principal industries of is tlie teak lumber business, ilc- the mast: valuable lumber fbr wilding in the world, Says Consul iral .Hamilton, king, qt Bangkok. •apjBsJnot Jrijeld to the influences of :tire and drought itvii not liable r-ittabk of 'borers'tiiiid other ln- fi dbes not split bf sprawl, and it is/ a stisWjg, dprable wood. It easy to «ork* and very light'In the ir. As a beaiitiful dark-colored susceptible ot verr high finish. It will continue toAbe .demand' Wherever fine .- finishing ber is osed in shipbuilding, and ber' at' its peculiar Qualities that re the influences of iron when in close contact therewith,, |s no snhstihite yet discovered lacking for^ arn«pr\ plates jhn $£ f-.i JiSig:,V-!]?:: Vspylnssi ln Povttk B-'ort, igh there is mucl) poverty ln: beautiful Island, there is also uK happiness. The poorest classes happy from morning till night, iey use the bark, branches and iijg of the trees for the oonstrac Ion of their houses. Largfr gourds i'stftem with bpeftecs, ajvd eoiall ifo^Bs^wlth various vessels. Fruit ^vegetables' are -ptentllnl all the rooad. Vwo- crtyps of odra.can ^B«jfTflStej(l. These hsfire oranges, bsti IpiantainS aad 'mangoes ha There i's ttn coid 'wtntef fnb ndaft tar. exltra dothlng ir tittl. ifto* RicovLette^' ihlcagb 'Ttoies-' Jftasslaa C«nju» Tsk|nf. ft.*. SThte ifrst general census in Russia' ('*takevn ta January, 189^, Dut-^a be exited In 8t»ch a vast country ie ^fiiculties aw so. greet that the cannot be vouched fnr as ab (iitely emrrect Compared wttii W5»t cOTXttrtes, census takfng in R^s ,4s mth« crudia^ Prtor^^ t6»^ been teJtiui. teu tiiO^but .iras to llmd.'OUt* wete ^ho paid or cwgfct ,tp^p^br *fbe ftrst oensos took pnee jso baAc as 1T24, when tfie mjaabcr of was set dow& at 14,000,000 llgiices in iSPt the ftutcbsr .as 000,000, Including Fk». T1^ 1 eitafce deteasaJ being this day-. mate. Inon o« «aid couttty, Cl|ilm+ VV. vvUstfm aod-demaarl^ I persons A'gataatsald e.uatc be presjat this CoMrt, fpr examination ana ullow* e, at the Probate Oflce in tbe ^illtvtre 'of rthlagton, lnl'«aid t^ounty, the fofUpw 'daVS, Yl*' -r? 7i ..i a 1 Ullow. the 5th dajr of August, 1901,. at'eae o'clnck'ft m. •»..*• 1 Ton MondayV'thp ?th day qr aeptemb#^ nt one o'clock p. m. p- nted for such examlnatlou, in the Worth iBitou Advance a weekly aewspip^r printed published at Worth!n|ton in aald^ouj^ ^»Dated al ^Porthi'ntoa, M!nne»off, the, •i2tUday of June, A. 1901. .. By the Court, v, C. -M. Co*r, ^ISBAL] Judife of Probate. junel4r28. '-Mi I* tj FOB fA|d^ UNIOR RKADeB#. & BWtt EMrly Bxv*Ut*pm with friwter I«nnr'» There's a beautlfu] golden cradle^ That rooks In the rose red sky I 'have seen ll there In the evening •Etr. When th« bats and beetles fly With tittle white clouds for yurtaina, pliofs of fleecy wool. And a dear little1, bed for the Moon |g^Bat?p''h^dWl Bo tiny anc beautiful. 'm, There are tender young stars around it, That wait for their bath of dew la the purple tints that the sun'a warm prints Have left on the mountain blue There are good little gentle planets That )rait to be nursed and kissed And laid to sleep in the ocean deep, "Und^r silvery, folds of mist. But the Moon Baby first must slumber. For he is their proud young king So, hand in hand, *Tound. his bed they stand And lullabies low thejf sing. And the beautiful golden cradle Is itcked by the winds that stray, With pinioins soft, from tbe halls, aloft. Where the Moon Baby lives by day. tern* About Money* Elsie's first experience with money occurred when She was so short that she- had to climb up on a stool in order to See the clerk behind the candy mju »i .a penny out of her little white mitten, reach it out to the clerk* and say, "A 'ittle tandy mousd, p'ease," So the first thing Elsie learned about money was that she could exchange it for something she wanted.- On day'Elsie's uncle came to ylsit her, and he gave her more atonej than she had. ever had at one time in her life—a bright new Bilver quarter. It was so pretty that Elsie thought slie would keep it always. She carried It everywhere she went, and thought about it most of the time. Then she began to be afraid Bhe would lose it, and it ^orried her very much until she thought of a place where she could hide it. When no one was looking she picked out a tiny spruce tree in the field wher® she often played, and under this tree she planted her shiny quarter. Then she ran away to play, hkppy in the thought that her precious money was safe. Next morning/ehe went to look at it She dug and dug all around the tree* bqt' Sfce ftid not find it. She hwked^tmder all. dther llttie siprtfw strange to ««*. thejr rtl, iookra so much, alike that »b« could not exactly remember which one was the tree wh^re^she buried her treasure^, She never fb^ncT the money, but she learned two things: First, igoney ]s a great care in itself and of no use anless it is in use second, buried money Is as good as no money- Tho next money Elsie had was a whole dol lar bill. She could hardly, believe thai the little refctangle of green paper ^as four times as good as the shiny money shjB had lost. They had to explain to, her that tour shiny sliver quarters had been locked up for her In Uncle Sam's big treasure house, and that the green bill was lust to say that she could buy .a dollar's wotrth ot something and he would pay the sliver or gold for it The :blU! ihe ^lid oni the Shelf behind th^clock, and on raihy daya, she trould cllmb up and look at it arid plan what she ^ould buy.with it at Chriatmas time. Wheh Chrtrtmas was nea^'tbe went with. A-untle to fown to spend tiie dollar. She. bought a Jack ltnlfe( fpjf Brother Kal, handkerchief for papa and a pretty cup and saucer for ifwmm* They were all so pleased and surprised with her presents that Elsie made up her mlnd that all money was good for was to spend'in making other people happy. Batiae'dfay wtli tall you how Elsle firBt leBnied that money had to be earned and htfw she earned her fliat mrau^y.—New York Press. 'V tl a ant Kwt« rurnri t«cfliur«b Somebody a^ked in rhyme not Wng agOi 'llid ybu ever s%e' a rahlAt cJimb a treef? And went on to explain tha reason why no ons had by saying that it "SUnply conlds't do it dant you see.'* That isnH mnch ol a reason, is it? Perhaps you know the real reason why and will toll us 'hat I'm going to give as my reason i^aant taught how when: it Iwai young, if its home had been up t}n tree I think it would have managed it as well as Its nrnnrtYi, tttynry ddn't JOO:7 But that isn't st all What I started out to lectors dboak, fbr 1 dare say all of you knxyv thrtje times ss omch as do/aboutfautoelsaa^.rabhlts and aa&k thtngs^-whi^ I meant to ask was, can yob wrtto wlth your tefl handT Or throw a .stonef Or bjush your hatrt Or^ttfB ypm KbIIB? (St bnttnn' faar shoes? Orxatctvaballt (fedtiahun dred other things? It fan cant ttta high timeyoubegan,ft»r,m ®pd pieioty of use tor your left hand tt yon only trato tt 4* yout hand la tratned, and develop this left side InuscW Dimt be dlsuniraged .because it ^^amrd jEoar« ttbe« just ssmem? her tha^ your right hand ha« been trained ever since ybo. were a lltOe i&by reaching oOt attar the pretty sed. worsted hall, lack Alllhg broke .l»Wi arm not lcmg^ago, sasd toe waa lfi despair «4ten he tras allowed to ygo ab&H Itttfe, hscaase. hte left hs&d dl4rft ftp al^he was sewuititiasd to hare his right band do he had to ha^e his meat cut ftir him. ftk* Mten and vptnen of gtiod addrM« 11»^| representi- (uf, somv tot 280h«ych ttftvei "np- ., pointlnii ifiiinU. otieri toi locM wtirk lPw SIs after curlnttrenw.'" •&5oj.ftl^y |W hnte«d yearly, extrn conyikiimlpii* ana pen«6«t rspfd ndvanrtmcnt,' tfJd£ fst*tell»hed a tonae. Gtund^lmnce Ipr Or iff earnest women to Hecai* kW',6 permanent noattirs, liberal Incbtae- and Ajs'l tnre.^ New, brilliant line*. Write ojw*. l}#f I 2 S S .New Haven, CoanfSl Stv M.D. '4 y-4t Office liext to- 0 Office. N M, DORAN & C0., Proviskxia. Members Chicago Head up kod^io MioceAote, theo-- ill? mtinR '•,'t "—Theoldest firm^'bf—ilf'A• T." BANKERS and BAKERS. IN TBE NOBTH WEST. *, V- Dealers io Bonds, Stocks,"Grain &l Board, of Trade. Private wxres to all lead ,^ r,' Ac Getaiania Life Insurance Oor. 4th and Minnesota i, **wy Sts,, favi* Maar' WakeW on our $7 Join lour excu^slon see tbe Cbicago. fie r'in mind "4 to $}2 prairi^ ta good*barg&itts« ,M. E. Lawton, Agent lor Central Minnesota [Land Company. Gold Awarded af the Paris Exposition ft" that not pri*e wss of Awards in Write at For Appointment of Ad-, mlnMtrator. STATE pf MINNESOTA, Countj .of JUoblctf, 8.8. :. —v ... In PrjObate Gonrt, Special Term, June :ftth, 1601. In the Matter of the Estnte of Cha^v O. Boynton, Dtteaicd: On.receiving and the ftettUoa. -vof.- 'rSmr1' 6o: W. Wilton, atiomey tor the helra at satd decfaaed of the county of Nobles, repre •enting amons other things,^ that Chas. O. i-4" B^ynton J»te of the county, of DeKfalb, in the ••etat^.of IUInolt,'on the.:18th :day. of April, A. D.10OO, atthc-County of DtKalb, :«itate of llllnai», died .Intestate, .leaving goodsi chattels and estate ulthin this county, 4H(o:^yMk that the said petitioner 1b •the ytBS a MEBIT and considered by the fJuty proves ctnclusively that '1H£ CHICAGO" is indeed^ "Standatd and can compete^succt ssftally with the high priced" machines' on*'merit alone. The price still remains at $35 h« this decision which a /I once for full information.' CHICAGO WpiTOG MACHINE' COMPANY, 94,96 Wendell St., Chicago|Ill. Order for Hesriiiir !j|* Application I atton»j ilor..«a the heirs of said deceased,"And prAying^ .that admintxtration ofsftld estate be to Charles Boynton and 'Elntei,'-R.-BAyfOn~gr£int)ed It is Ordered^ That said pe,$tlon be before said Court, on JUqnday^ the 1st. day & of July A. D. 1901, atf6nV,6'clocfc p. m. at the Probate officer in the- l^ourt House In Worthingtoft, in said county. ~f 1 ^Ordered.further,v That notice 'thertW'ffee' given to tnehc rs of &al3 deceased and:Alt" personsfhitereKted. br publishing" this.-OCdeK otice in each wrr-lt for three- successive -weeka prior to said dt.y of hearing, in the Worth lngton Advance, a week1vnewspaper printed and pnhllshed at Wot cUington, in said County. v*. HV Dated at Worthingto-.i, Miha., the fith day of Jurist A. p.1901. ?eal ft C. M. COIIY, *,,\ "Sgi vu "f G^*atl«ki4Trade-MatUobtaincdandali£n ij.jJ edt btttlnesi idndttcieSior Moe emtc Fttfc, fL bw.HOffict OtfO«irKU, a. PflTcHTOffiblj to IQ f8.CI&WeQn.mttQ(4Q jest kuqc ton IMMI Hi' BOM &MB Wash&KUilW: iJSaSSs ieiqttoa, Addiein,' O.A.8NOWfcCOn .. ....: ~t