Newspaper Page Text
OF tTENERAL INTEREST. -Tie longest ewim ever made in th Tomgh sea vas by Samuel Brock, a Yar mouth fisberman, on October 1, 183J The vessel in which he sailed was wrecked, aid he swam seventeen miles in seven amd one-half hours through a strong' gale. In the tansas building1 at the ex position Ls a banner made in 1838 by the pupil of the Lombard school for the Lincoln-Do icplas campaign; a spinning wheel made ia 16'20; a chair that came over in the Mayflower, and a flag made in 177tt and carried at Plattsburg in 1813. Thomas .nd 1'hebe Shaddock, ol San Francisco, are the champions in peculiar line. The parties were first : kkmiicu in mr rdsi in io.j. auu uurtua ! the forty-one years which have ensued since that time they have been alter nately attracted to and repulsed by each other five times. . The other day some Luzerne, New York, lads who haul visited a country fair and seen a balloon ascension at tempted to duplicate the novelty. While their parents were absent from home one climbed to the roof and put big paper bag over the chimney. To inflate this bag the other boy placed a lot of kerosene-soaked powder in the tove and "touched it olT." The house ivas insured for t SOO, and the criminal clause had been omitted. Large beds of oysters have been discovered in the Pacific waters off Alaska. It had been thought that the water was too cool, but there are places where it is warmed by the Japan cur rent which modifies the temperature of the Pacific eoast more than the gulf stream does that of the Atlantic coast The Alaskan oysters are pronounced a very superior variety, much better than the, small oysters grown near the coast of California. American Cultivator. Excellency is now applied to am bassadors. It was formerly a royal ti'".e and during the middle ages princes were sometimes put to death for trea son because they assumed this title. It was first bestowed only on the am bassadors of monarchs and denied to those of a republic, but in the seven teenth century, Venice, after an im mense amount of correspondence, suc ceeded in obtaining it for her ambassa dors, and since then it is applied to all envoys. ' The supreme judicial court of Mas sachusetts is to decide whether a cred itor who invades a debtor's bedroom and wakes him up early in the morning in order to present his bill is guilty of an assault. The aggravating party in the dispute is a milkman and the ag grieved person is his customer, who says' that lie forbade the milkman to invade his privacy, and was awakened by being shaken by the shoulder when suffering from a severe headache. The lower court entered judgment for the milkman and the plaintiff appealed to the full bench of the supreme court. Several wild turkeys that had a love for swallowing shining particles that had been shot by a hunter'on one of the branches near San Diego, Tex. , netted him quite a handsome stiftn in gold, which he found in their craws, that they " had picked up. In South Africa ostriches have been successfully employed in finding gold deposits. A drove of the birds are turned loose to feed in the territory where the precious metal is supposed to exist They are then given an emetie and the ejecta carefully examined for nuggets, and if any are found the trail of the bird is .-followed until the diggings are discov ered. How time is passing in all parts of the world is the interesting story which every day was told by twenty-two clocks in the terminal building of the world's fair. These clocks have been set up by an enterprising New York clock company and are every day in spected by hundred of curious visitors. The records made show that when it is 1.80 in New York, Chicago timekeepers say 13.30; Paris, 0.83; London, G.SO; San Francisco, 10. SO; ISuenos Ayres, 2.-20; Santiago, 1:45; Honolulu, 4.10; Sydney, 4.10; Yokohama, 3.48; Hong Kong, 2.05; I torn bay, 11.30; Mecca, 0.10; Jerusalem, 1.03; St Petersburg, 8. SO; Cairo, 8.35; Koine, 7.20; Madrid, &15, and so on. Coin collectors have long appreci ated The difficulty of making a com plete collection of American specimens. The United States coinage of 1798 is very rare and a dollar of the year 1794 has often sold for as much as ?100. A 1790 half-cent is so rare as to sell read ily for $15, and a half dollar of the same year is worth sixty times its orig inal value. While the half-cent of ISO-t is common enough, all the other coins of that year are rare, the dollar of that particular date being1 the rarest of all American coins. Only eight are known to exist out of the 19,570 that were coined. The lowest price . that one of these now changes hands for is $S00. A great international concert at Festival hall was an attraction ar ranged by the world's fair managers. Irish vocalists and harp-players came from BlarnejT castle; a trio of Swiss yodelers and a player on the eight-foot Alpine horn; a company of Javanese musicians with their curious instru ments and Col. Sliney's troupe of Chi nese actors and jugglers entertained the audience in turn. The Indians in vited to take part had' partaken so freely of "fire-water" that they were not presentable,'and the brothers from Dahomey decided to stay at home and gather in gate-money. , About eight thousand people were in the audience. The varieties of sleigh bells this season will be larger than-ever and manufacturers eater more to luxurious tastes. As one can now pay $50 or more for a whip, so can he give $40 for a body strap of bells. For that he can get a strap covered with Alaska seal skin, with sixty silver, brass, gold or nickel bells, the metal not being, of course, so precious as the names indi cate. Somewhat cheaper straps, are made of beaver or mink, wool seal, kangaroo, ooxe calf or Persian lauia. Or if the pleasure-seeker wishes, he can imitate the tastes of the Russian, the Laplander or the Tartar. . I n foxtail chimes he can find the upright, the drooping' and the hanging plumes, 6r some elegant horse hair plumes, for $S0 per pair. Yes, this is the end. It could not g-o fnrther. Murder or disease has wiped out the justice, the lawyers, the prin- cipais anu me witnesses, ana in some . , . . . .. . . i traaii lueir cnuuren. mere is uu one left to go into ambush no one to come ridiajr along and topple off his horse a corpse at the report of the shot gun loaded with slugs. Chicago Times. TERRITORY TO THE SOUTH. Why It I rndHirtbI for Annexation to th Lotted State. The acquisition of territory to the south of us would spring, not from the feeling of naturally belonging together, but the desire on our part to gain cer tain commercial advantages: to tret possession of the resources of other countries, and hvn!(i t np thorn to in- crease our wealth; to occupy certain strategical positions which, in case of war. might be of importance, and so on. It is evident that if we once are fairly started in the annexation policy for such purposes, the appetite will grow with the eating. There will al waj'H be more commercial advantages to be gained, the riches of more coun tries to be made our own, more strat egical positions to be occupied to pro tect those already in our hands. Not only a taste for more, but interest, the logic of the situation, would push us on and on. The consequences which inevitably would follow the acquisition of Cuba, which is especially alluring to the an nexationist, may serve as an example. Cuba, so they tell us, possesses rich natural resources worth having. It is in the hands of a European power that may, under certain circumstances, be come hostile to us. It is only a few miles from the coast of Florida. It "threatens" that coast. It "com mands" a 'o the Uv'f of Mexico, with the mouths of the Mississippi and the Caribbean sea. Its population is dis contented; it wishes to cut loose from Spain and join us. If we do not take Cuba "some other power will take it 1 hat power may be hostile. Let us take it ourselves. What then? Santo Domingo is only a few miles distant from Cuba; also a country of rich re sources; other powers several times tried to get it; if in the hands of a hos tile power it would "threaten" Cuba; it also "commands" the Caribbean sea; the Dominican republic, occupying the larger part of the island, offered to join us once, and will wish to do so again; to acquire the Haitian republic we shall have to fight; it will cost men and money, but we can easily beat the negroes. We must have Santo Domin go. Puerto Rico will come as a matter of course with Cuba. The British pos sessions of Jamaica will still be there to "threaten" and "command' every thing else. It will be difficult to get it and the other little islands from the clutch of the British lion. Thus all the more necessary will it be to have possession of the mainland bordering and "commanding"' the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean sea on the western side. We must have all the "keys" to the seas and to the land, or at least as many as we can possibly get, one to protect another. In fact when once well launched on this course, we shall hardly find a stopping-place north of the Gulf of Durien; and we shall have an abundance of reasons, one as good as another, for not stopping even there. Carl Schurz, in Harper's Magazine. OVER A BILLION DOLLARS. Probable Street Paving Expenditure in America for the Next Ten Years. It is only in American cities having a population of more than 10,000 that less than one-third of the total lengths of streets has been paved in any man ner. If the construction of new pave ments on the remaining 24.83S miles of streets in such cities proceeds as rapid ly as now seems probable, the expendi tures for this work for the next ten years will aggregate upward of $1,000, 000,000. It is doubtful if more than 00 per cent, of the streets of these cities would then be well paved. From a well-paved street abutting real estate derives increased value, hardly ever less and often many times more than the cost apportioned to it It is, there fore, right that abutting property should, as it does in most American cities, bear the cost of the construction of a pavement, whieh becomes at once a substantial improvement, having a I salable value, on which the property owner alone can realize. The benefits are shared to some extent by adjacent property which may not abut on the street, but it is doubtful if a fair and practical apportionment of the cost could be carried beyond the border line, though the justice of this restric tion is almost intolerably strained when one paved street is compelled to bear the travel that would pass over others if put in equally good condition. Ml calculations of the economies and profits of paved streets fail to encom pass the sum of gain from them, be cause there is much involved that is intangible in character. The benefits of better sanitary conditions, with the consequent productiveness resulting from good health, the saving of ex penses for medicines and the profes sional services of physicians; the pro longing in some cases of lives that might succumb to the deleterious in fluences inherent in bad streets all are incalculable; nor can be estimated the far-reaching results of the re tarded development 'of a city due to failure to provide good streets. The common mistake of regarding the cost of a street pavement as a merely luxu rious expense, rather than as a profita ble improvement has. more than any thing else, deferred the work of put ting the roadways of our American cities and towns in proper condition. and. it should be added, has hindered progress and prosperity immeasurably. It has also had a mischievous influence. when coupled with false ideas of econ- to Wm wfth a wwa iar number of oeoDle the main desidera- turn when they find that paving cannot Ions' be deferred. A record of the failures that it has inevitably led to since the beginning of experiments in roadmaking- -would tell about all of the history of paving that is worth know ing. Century. SPCIlREITO TAICIFF ACTION- DemK.ltttjc Leaders Ild tli- Ison f th EWtitiu. Washington, Nov. 8. Justaseoou as cougress reconvenes in regular session December 4 the work of tar iff revision will be entered upon by the Democratic leaders. That Pres ident Cleveland's messa will ur-je the congressional workeis to activity goes without question, but that those workers will aiso heed the lessons of the election of Tuesday is equally true. The democrats now in the city agree that the results of that election showed not that the people had thauged their minds kiuce 1890 and 1892, but that they were more or less impatient at the inaction of cougress. The apparently overwhelming pop ular indorsement of the policy of high protection iu Ohio, it is agreed and confessed eveij by Repulicaus here, was iu de part to the person al popularity cf Governor Mi Kinley and sympathy with hiuu iu his re cent financial misfoi iunts. It is not questioned that, had Foraker or any other Republican been the nominee a :d the same kind of a .campaign baeti made, there would not have b?en cne fifth as large a Repulicau majority. Tariff reform is now more tha'i e' er the motto of the democratic It-at'-ers and the ways und means majority has resumed woik with vigor with the purpose of putting through re visions as speedly as possible. THEY XKVT.lt DiK. The Wart It fr'aiiniy Speak WVll Fr Missouri' Climate. Clinton, Mo , Nov. 7. The visit, of two sisters has disclosed a te markable instance of family h-nge-ity iu the case of George V. Warth of this city, the aggregate of him self three sisters and a brother being 400 years or an average of eighty years. Mr. Warth is now 87 jears old and there are now visiting him his sisters, Mrs. Hannah English of Jacksonville IU.. ageel 89 veais; and Mrs. Julia Wat sou of St. Paul Miu . ageel 73 years. Another sister, Mrs. Rebecca Micheal, residing in Cal houn, this (Henry) county is 80 years old, while a brother, Judge Warth of Ch u leston, W. Va , is 71 years of age. Considering their advanced ages these old folks are remarkably well preserved and are iu the enjoyment O splendid health and are quite ac Mr. Waith has been a resident of Clinton and Henry county the gre at erp titof the time sine 1S5(J. He has now living six childi ea-four soua'aml two daughters, the-younger of whom 1S 43 ears old. 22 grand children, 16 meat ri a idfliileb e ti Mr Warth's wife died in iSHO at tht; ripe ejli ( age of 84 yeai. Nllpieille t ..ni l Mallet.-. Jefferson City. Mo., Nv It Iu divisiou No 2 of the fuinreuie couit' this inoruinu. Dick Kobiusou a ue .-n. who killed a vn.imr German "ill , t i J ,, " . w. q October 22 1802. was sentenced to I ba hanged December 15 1803. The S tak vmi to Fram:?' K-'nJ-opinion was tiled bv Judge Gantt!3auJ' N'urw', Swede,., Gen and concurred in by the other mem bers of the court. John rector of lVriy county, who ! killed Chailes Cannll in a it- n fr i i r, 1 n 1892 and was sentenced to th peni tentiary for ten years, was ordered discharged, the supreme court hold ing that the evidence was uot suffi cient to couvict of felany. Patrick Murphy of St. Louis, who criminally assaulted a 14 year old girl, goes to the penitentiary for 30 years which is equivalent to a life sentence. Judge Geo. G.Symes, ex congress man, lawyer, republican politicion, pioneer and wealthy citizen of Colo- r , . . , , . a rado, suicided . at Denver Saturday morning by shooting himself with a . . , . . . , pistol. The act is thought to have been committed while he was suffer- . , , - , , f leg great physical pain as he left a, uote to his wife saying he was tuitr- j insr a terrible attack of congestion of ! the back and braiu. tiia body was t . fouud some hours afterward sitting 1 m n chair in his room. Aitist: "Do you think the expres sion in this picture is good?" 'Well, yes; if you intended it to be bad, it is excellent." Not luaitv month!) since a t;r: was -ent iu a box car coiis-igm-d to a! ceitaiu eastern city. Som- iim dut-i ing the trip the bta-t brok tbroiiirh ! the bus of it- cge and vvj:n tLe! station master began to open tLe i car door Le perceived the animal! within, loose uv.d raging whueupon j he prodded th animal with . ti'.-k ior hick, ooseu th door an t suit the err on to the next cUtion nd wired the station ageutat that p!.u-: "Tiger loose in car X s. . L"ok out!'" The situation of this station ira- Ur is very similar to that f the i puhHcati party in the present ri so cial question. When it found lie curie icy tiger on its bauds, lsg'.ng, it promptly boxed it up ai d shipped it on to the democratic station to tid itself of the responsibility. Nou its organs shriek because the democrats have not accomplished iu a few das the taming of a tiger enraged for years under its prodding H u ti- n riUe Democrat Cat anli iu Colorado. I used Ely's Cream Balm for diy catarrh. If proved a cure. L. M. Weeks, Denver. Ely's Cream Bidm is especially adapted as a remedy for cat art h which is aggravated by dry winds at.d alkaline dust. W A Hover drugit, Denver. I can ucecnuven i Elys Cieam Balm to all sufferers fieim di v catan from peisonal expeiiei.ee. Micheal Heir, Denver. Ely's Cream Balm has cured many ease of catarrh. It isj in constant demand. Geo. W Hoy t Pha mact Cheyene Wy Hunter Fatnlly li'jiired. West Plains, Mo, Nov. 7. Jeiry Butt aid two companions went hunting in Shanuou county. They B p:iraleei in the hills and as Butts approached the spot agreed upor, oue ef his compnions tireel a signal gui . The ball struck Butts in the regiou f the heart and went through the body. He was taken to Winona and when la-t heard from was ex pec'.ed tei elie;. State ok Ohio, City eF Toledo Licas Colnty. ) Frank Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partner ot Lhe hrm ot I-. 1 Chenev & Co., doimr business in the titv of Toledo, ceuntv and ktate afore aid, and that said firm will pay the sum ot ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS tor each and everv- case ot catarrh that can not bt cured bv the use cf Hall's jja tarrh ure. Frank J. Cheney. Sworn io before me and subscribed in my presence, thisoth day ot December A. D. iSSf , A W Gleason, -! seal ! Notary Public. Hall's Catanh Cure 1s taken internally and acts directly on the blood and niu cou- surfaces ot the"" s stem. Send f r testimonials tree. K. I. CHENEY .V CO., Toledo, O Kg"Soid by Druggets, 7sc An Offer Extraordinary. Only 10 Cents a Week. A uiairiiiaceut t..rtfoi:ri of e iLrrav- j ingss of faiuou ckies, scenes and p nutings with descriptions by John L. Stoddard, tin; wot Id's famous travel er ai.d lecturer, lia.- been is sued, each I) nk containing 10 beaut ful engravings, 11x18 inches in size jandwdl worth $1.50 e-ach. Tht-y can b" i-ecuied at the trifling amount i of 10 ie,,!8 11 week by ubsciibing ! to The Twice a We. k Republic. Iii the hrso book Mr. btobdard Ire Germany Palestine, Switzerl.i i.t, Austria, Ita ly, Brazil, Mexico and the Uuited I States. Republic i x Ui Will ka-uiais j. li t a sOtnple cpy of whieh will be en free urviti recent of a i ostal caru A. - request. Oc if you wrut a bain pi of the "Art Portfolio'' cut this ad vertispiiient out and send it in with 10 cents aad series No.l will be 6eu you. Wiihout this ad '1 cents wi be charged. Address, Ilooui 28 Republic, Si. Louis, Mo. S L llUllLU U 111111 photographed and described. Wide awake agents wanted -for our new World's Fair book bv Director Gen- erai Davis, Mrs. Potter Palmer and other official. Over 500 pictures, nearlv all photgraphs. 628 pages, j. rice Big commission. Freight paid. 30 days" credit. Celling fa.-t. Men or ladies make $10 a dav. Send for eircuiars; or nd w cenis to-day for large outfit containing 100 photo- ti?rapns.- r. w. egter to., ' Market St., St. Loui, 5Io. i-4t. aaAKaa aiifaw taat I eeaid ijT -t Tat acrcuopaarog e 'Kift 3 ite 1S i&a la m Aowttaranaaaflmnarln' treak-'Bait av . r. m. tl av nt. ImWaatmlMt. li: a, 9a. Ilia. allcM. MyfacsatIS ' w. mm. m. oiml Wal l In ii f n fir Trrrr tm PATtERTS TREATED BY HAIL. COMFlttEimU- . 1 1. r. unci, rncsrsTiuru. niutt, u. BrfM. Ate. Lw. POSITIVE CURE. -.iwa ELY EBOTKERS. 68 Warren IT IS SO NOMINATED IN THE BOND." Warranted Columbias. With every Columbia is a warrant backed by the oldest bicycle house in Ameiica the largest in the world a factory which does not turn out poor woik a plant of superlative excellence in machinery and skilled work men a reputation unmatched iu cycledom all these things guarantee the Cdumbias folks make no mistake in Columbia buying book abut Coliimhies. to good f a-a catalogue 45 beautiful engravings easy to rea.1 cjitipi elinisive free at Columbia agencies by mail for 2c stamps. 'BOOK OF OUTDOORS. Unbiased nt tides, with no ad tiding in them, on all high giade outdoor pleasure. Cydii.tr, b Juli.en Hawthorne; foot ball, by Walter Camp; base ball, by" J C. Mor-e; rowing, by Benjamin Garuo; cauoting, by C Bowyer Yaux; Ltwn Ternis, by F. A. Kellogg; Yatching, by George A. . Stewart; Hoi enuu.idiip; by H." C. Mervin. Magniticeutly illustrated by Copeland, Men ill. Beats. G i!larher, and Shute, with covers in ten water c:!ors 1" G H. Back of New York. All for 5 two cent stamps. POPE MFG CO. Boston, ITow Ycrls, Chicago, Hartford, 65 Cents Per Month. If you wMttid keep posted, subscribe for THE KANSAS CITY TIMES, The best daily paper west of the Mississippi llivei. 7.50 A Year. : l LEWIS & CO. Proprietor of Elk Horn Stables Having purchased the E1k Horn barn and l.ivery outfit ot J. W Smith, and naving auvieu io tne same a number ot first-class Buggies, and horseR, I can sav to the public i tut I now have the Best Livery Bam In southwest Mo. Hor.-co and mules bought and sold, or slock handled on commission. Stock bearded hi the Ha week or month, With 16 years exper ience Mr Lewis reel able to compete with anv Livery barn in this section. Call ar.d ee him C U LEWIS At CO COPYRICHTS. etcJ For information and free Handbook write to MUN-S Co S)A Bhoauwjiv, new York. Oldest bureau for secoiinic patents In America. Krery patent iuen out dj os u urouent ceiore the public by a notice given free ol charge iu the Largest clrcolatlon of any acientlCc paper In th world. Splendidly Illustrated. No Intelliirent man chonid be without, it. Week It O.UO a year; f lJiumz roornnj. jicrareM ai l . ft tx) VcBUsauu, 361 roadway. Hem Vork City. $500000. We desire to vlace out on real estate security o large t m oun t ofmon ey- Will give the best terms and lowest rates yet offered by anyone in, this line of business- J,"otcs drawn for one two, three or five years- Harp some money to loan mumble on or before a. given date- . . . Call and see Iww cheaii we can let you have money- The Bankers Loan & Title Co P. a FULKERSOK. Manager. Jure the h"itu cr tateilfrf- mjiL mfyntnrirff or pleassre. Ii builds tip r4 inrrt tls e srai No wiijikl or SaMnaefW toilf tim tn at-jjoat. Esuct51 by t-tTsiciaas tad irvia: ii--i'-t i.-n. PATIEHTS TREATED BY BIL COkFiOtSTllSU liicaim. Mm HtarU Sa-i wa i tta&pt w4iia- im sl a.5. r. strati. tMutriuniii. usm. ra WICOXCOttPOUND ANSKO PILLS Tmexspnloas persona are enRa ttv ttxfiuiog Witex Ciaai ana i laytae ggnmne ara pt ap la I wliMTtkUitmrt trade mark of ne-wori lifa aa ml i h . lnaarto ' theBDm,ataalIraKlaa. bnd4rtafor 'byaaU.WlJcxapM.;.rftlkura. HaflHHI mmt9 90wemwU mBm nrxura tawaa tertifie American l s TRADE MARKS, fes-JYj DESIGN PATENTS, "MM. mm iwiunr 1 u i&BbMi bt. Sew York, rr.ee wcu.a 0EFERS THE L0WESTSE RATES with Direct Lines Fast Time Elegant Pullman Service Reclining Chair Cars ST. LOUIS KANSAS CITV CHICAGO AND THE WORLD'S FAIR f C W Ttar BMreit rat tr MrUriUn k n W 1 V ut.Uut iar ticket rea4s m Ul fpUr "Missouri Paclflo rty." H. C. TOWNSEND, General Passenger and Ticket Agent, ST. LOUIS. 8vre, Prompt, Foaltn Curt for Impotent: Leu of Manhood. StmliuU 1 Bmltlon$, 8permatorHu, Ntruousncts, Self UittrutU . Lota of Memory, Ac. Will make you a 8TH0N9. Vigor en Man Prlc 41.00, 8 Boxee. fS 00. Bwdal Oirtetton$ MatlrH mlth each Bo. Andre Bail: A CaawTlatafrt Cs-, 29IO Lucas Ave 8T. LOUIS. MO. iuwAa EM Ti oor.rfMinAt- Mlar4 if 1H imrr for th H- CEIA CORolTIi ; otllrUfU u 3x witlciv ah fjtrttnB t bath br G odtlerarbriacsua L trofiu to th Afnt. t or ter .urnfry a Samp! CwtM nitilrt uKESnait cgbsetco..b.i JHARY HOLDER .. if res lik fob, ttit to tH it am mm au . Us. fom mmr noneed Lb w. catspuy. wiuck start out m toUaw. I .1 f IAA mT in UU Ml -83 sold in f09 ::68 sold Sn 049 sold In '''flainhaanMla . A StMi WMmm and Statf Towar fry 9 minwH C7TIMM flZUTM MH M j WJ I i4Zj. WW vW M9inon9 waa v m mm .,.- w . aad ta ITK f.m.'ftm 8U. ' ... 1 1 1 r MrriT nunw . , " i. ay t of ta - i'..rfxrr eaavpaaiatl . ntlr farsiakad kr a a aack la tHa ttqidar, aa4 aqsry aa a n looa ; M!i .1 Mi9 hoida tha Baia, raa,diy f yaw a year. rri U taat an la laja: S aaa aiarta a at aartaat, ti, avnoanaaa anixla. ao4 ..uBlatBad a aa alaaar af mm uaa aapuaa ta. arBcia , .. at tvm- Tba rrt af taaaa aiary fbaMarate Waa aa (nat ltaaay aaw ' ea ,el, f -rt aaaaai- aaaaapaataaian tt"un itaa af taa lini. ara laiaa n Hi liliail af Oaaaaa. aad aa me ay ail lifWEcnonil lilHTEmiTiJ Oar PKSVartnw trrA . J 1 1' w4 C4 -:r-. Af MS laft. a J" -- o aa rraix. rtSTntTS araieycBfci CntlWfetlMt aad GI.CTT la Oaa a fca aja, A.pccccafcrLiccoa4xaar warrcs. -z." aULlaVE aUSMCKVMH CO. LiaCaSTU, VmMm J UK V V . . . I