IiUP i-U:K. .U TIME.
HON FY 'AND REWARD
TMOSC
WHO LABOR
THEN.
T1*e SoMmi t* Now at I
to Height, and Her*
Art Ptw ObMirvntluni on Hop Culture
mmS Harrent ami til* Dane*s That CHM
After Mo
?|)«r.
OP dances are
about as impor
tant a feature of
the hop hsr.tsf
time as tlio pick
ing of the hope,
and both are at
their best just
now.
Did you evwr
pick hops or go
to a hop fiance?
Then yon htve
missed experi
ences of which
nothing can take
the place. The
work is hard, the
hours are long in
the field, but the
fun when the
work is over, and the field has been de
serted for thoday, and the sun hits set, is
fascinating enough to make it all up.
At least that is what thousands of hop
pickers think about it.
Clear skies and pure air are essential
to successful hop growing. The hop
must be planted and tended with great
care. From the beginning to the har
vest and through the kiln to the market
there is no cessation of anxiety. A hop
field just ready for picking is one of the
most beautiful spectacles that can be
found any where, the vines greatly ex
ceeding in grace the vines of the grape.
As the golden wreaths of hops hang
ripening in the warm sunshine or swing
in the breeze in parachute shaped cano
pies they lond a picturesqueness to the
fields that canaot bo matched in the
vineyards of either the old or the new
world.
Until a comparatively recent date
mpst of the hops grown in North
America were planted in the state of
New York, although there were small
areas devoted to hop culture in New
Jersey. Michigan, Canada and Wiscon
sin. More lately the Pacific coast has
forged to the front as a hop producing
region, and there are also now many
fields of hops in Nebraska and Kansas.
The hop district in England is circum
scribed to the "wealds of Sussex and
Kent." Beyond their employment as
an ingredient of yeast and certain drug
gists' preparations the two or three
hundred millions of pounds of hops that
are yearly produced on this terrestrial
hall are devoted tonoother purpose than
the brewing of beer, and it is whispered
in some quarters that certain substitutes
for hops have been used even by the
brewers.
The ripening of the hops must be fol
lowed by speedy picking if the crop is to
be saved in good order, and of course
pickers are in great demand at the open
ing of the season. The pickers'work in
parties of four, usually at boxes divide
so that each picker shall have a compart
ment. To them the pullers bring the
uprooted vines still twined about the
poles. From he vines the pickers strip th«
golden green balls,dropping them into the
boxes for the "tenders" to inspect. The
inspection is one of the moat important
portions of the work, for as the pickers
are paid by the quantity of hops picked
there is naturally a tendency to mingli/
leaves and pieces of vine with the pick
ing. Tally is kept of the number of
boxes filled by each picker. After a box
is full its contents arev "sacked" and
taken to the kilns, where they are dried
Nfor
14 hours and subjected to the bleach
ing agency of the fumes of sulphur.
St much for the work. Now for t!u
play.
In New York state and the east gener
ally the workers are made up of "home
pickers" and "foreign pickers." To the
former hop picking is a period of hard
work, considered only as such, and en
dared solely for the money there is in it.
To the "foreign picker," who, being away
from home, is privileged to be a little
more dashing in respect of personal con
duct, hop harvest seems to be primarily
a time of hilarity by night, with the
working hours of the day thrown in as
a necessary excuse for the picker's pres
ence and the Support of that individual
during tue timeu£ enjoyment. The army
of
•C
r?/
iK
V"
Pi.
V
&
"•4
•in
0
I
IX THE HOPK1ELD.
«f pickers is made up of men and boys
•nd women and girls, 'ind a hearty, good
ttaturwi. w reaming lot they are. They
«re'
many conditions in life. The
^-saleslady" from New York orUtica or
%-racuse who takes l^ vacation in the
lippfield. earning her way the while,
works alongside the factory girl, and the
heavy, brawny young countryman, and
the jwile, spectacled, ftat chested young
*udent who in earning money to help
ttieet the *xpeuses of his next term at
college, are mates.
Whatever other qualities any of them
jpmmem. here *he is likely to work hard
#11 day. not only fur the money reward
th*t is snre to follow, but because a
»ost unmerciful guying i» the portion
"•f every «w who shows in the hopfield
4»ny disputation to let the golden minute*
0f daylight slip by in loitering. Most of
V •!/,
i
V.v.
y
..
Y
their employers, and on large farm* ti*«
"hoppers' boarding houses" are some
times quite important structures, with
scj«u:\".t" •,er!:jitor: for the men and
women. On sm turns less care is
takou with these |:octs. All, men and
women alike, are expected to make their
own us. The food in most eases is
abundant and good and includes a lib
eral allowance of pie. The tableware is
not of the most delicato china, but ia
usually chosen because of its solidity.
Sometimes the plates and cups are of tin.
But nobody minds that. Nobody goes
hopping for style. Money and fun are
what they are after, and the fun comes
after supper. Then the dances, then
the moonlight walks, then the drives
about the country in buggies—all these
for the young folks who are inclined
somewhat to sentiment. For the men
and boys who don't want to be bothered
with the girls there are wrestling
matches and stories and pipes, and some
times a little hard cider for a change, but
not often any disreputable proceedings.
A hop dance is a social function that
possesses its own forms of etiquette, al
though these vary with the locality. Is
it possible, by the way, that dances of
another grade were first called "hops"
because the terpsichorean festivities of
hop harvesters are called "hop dances?"'
Usually the hop dance is held in the
barn. The floor is swept clean, and the
fanning mill is set outside along with
other agricultural implements that are
usually stored there. The light is fur
nished by kerosene lamps—sometimes
by candles.
Most of the girls attire themselves in
white for the occasion. The young men
used to wear their fine boots, to their
great physical torture, when I was fa
miliar with hop dances, although they
were sometimes content with greased
stogas. I do not know whether the fine
boot habit still prevails among them or
not, but it is likely that it has succumbed
to the march of civilization together
with bear's grease for the hair. The
music used always to be brought from a
fiddle. The instrument is now more often
a mouth organ. Moneymusk is still a
favorite dance, and so is the Virginia
reel. In some places they waltz even ts
do their fellow dancers at Newport and
Bar Harbor.
There is a certain awkwardness about
the making up of the sets that is quite
offset by the vigor of the dancing when
everything is ready. If the music be
that of the fiddle, the musician calls off
the figures if a mouth organ, there is a
special "caller," and in either case the
9)
THE DANCE IN THE BARN.
calls are apt to be pitched in the key of
the music. I remember one old chap
who used to fiddle for 50 cents a dance
and sing his calls in a sort of improvised
doggerel to the air he was sawing out on
his fiddle. Another would keep up a
running comment in a sort of nasal
monotone which he would interrupt at
the proper moment with the words of
the calling:
'Step-right-along-there-Jim-Van-Bus
kirk. Don't-get-on-the-lady's-dress. All
sashay! Well-done, fust-rate-Robert*
Johnson-you-are-keeping-step-A-l. La
dies change!" And so on.
In the meantime there would be such
a lively swinging of partners at corners,
such a cutting of pigeon wings at oppor
tune moments and such eccentricities
generally on the part of the ex^rta as
greatly delighted all present, but would
fill tl
the breasts of the dancers at a fash
ionable city assemblage with the most
profound dismay.
The hop dances of today do not greatly
differ from those of other days, though I
have heard of a series that was held in a
mid New York state village in a rink
this year where an earnest attempt was
made to conform to urban ideals in
dancing and etiquette. The result was
interesting. Sometimes dudes from the
towns invade the hop dance and try to
monopolize the attention of all the pret
tiest girls. When that happens, look out
for storm. It won't do, however, to as
sume that it is always the dudes who
get the worst of it, although that is usu
ally the result of a contest between them
Mid pickers, owing in some measure pos
sibly to the superior numbers of the
packers, who generally stick by each
other.
With variations the hop pickers of the
«ast and west and of merrie, merrie Eng
land are alike. "Goin "oppin" they call
tt in the tight little island, and the ranks
of the 'oppers" are largely recruited
from Loudon and other cities as they are
from cities here. In the state of Wash
ington Indians have done most of the
picking till lately, when the Chinese be
gan to take the places of the redskins.
The hop picking Indians came from
British Columbia and as far north as
southern Alaska, crossing the straits of
Fuca and the gulf of Oeorgia to get to
the hopfields.
In their way they fill the hours of
night with merriment the same as the
white pickers of the east, but when the
Chinese pick hops by day they sleep and
smoke by night. Chinese hop pickers
are not popular save with the owners of
the yards.
Hop picking is a healthy employment,
and many persons engage in it for a
season or two simply as a recuperative
measure. As
manual labor goes it
pays
well, and there are probably in every
hop raising neighborhood whole families
who earn almost all the money they ex
pend during the entire 12 months at hop
LMTiMbU Diintlitf tfe*
The Australian colonies are going
through a crisis of a familiar kind—
though in their ease it is rather excep
tionally complicated and extensive.
Their banks have taken a great «!.?«}
more money to invest than they could
place both safely and profitably. There
has con:e a pinch and in di:e course
such a succession of bankruptcies as con
stitutes "a. crisis." In their case the
pinch has been produced by the collapse
of what—in the new slang of commerce
—is called a "boom" in land. These
things are to the sjectator no more in
telligible than a dancing mania or any
other form of nervous excilem^i.t car
ried to and for a space just a little over
the border of madness.
To the average pf raon in possession of
a moderate amount of common sense
who merely looks on "a boom" appears
to be a phenomenon of much the 6aine
nature as those outbreaks of religious
insanity which are occasionally heard of
in Russia or Spain—paroxysms of lunacy
in which whole villages strip off their
clothes and caper about the countryside
singing hymns or throw their children
into fires in order to purify them from
original sin. It seems so obvious that a
great many cannot make a very high
profit where it has been made for a
short time by a few. The ond of
"booms" is so inevitable and has Ijeen
shown by so long and so unvarying an
experience that it appears incredible
there should exist people who can still
rush blindly into them. To this of
course the answer is that experience has
no effect on human folly, whether it is
of the silly order which cannot learn or
of the cunning order which thinks it
can profit by tho weakness of others.—
London Saturday Review.
A Full Hide or No Far*.
Art Important case affecting
of piss ngers on street railways has inst
oeen uecided by the practical aamis:- on
of the counsel for the defendants in the
case of Harry Sloan against the Balti
more Traction company that the claim
of the plaintiff wa3 a just one. Mr.
Sloan on the night of Dec. 31 last board
ed a cable car going east. The weather
was inclement, and ilr. Sloan was ill.
He tendered his fare to the conductor,
the n:e::ey was received, and tho4 f,.re
rung up* The car proceeded bnt a short
distance when s-omething happened in
tho cable, and the car stopped. Mr. SI an
waited for
some
time. Tho car didn't
start, and ho asked the conductor to re
turn him
his
fare. This tho conductor
refused to do, savin- that .s it had been
rung up it would e impossible for him
to do
fo
without losing it himself. Final
ly Mr. Sloan got out and we.Iked to Irs
home. He brought suit before Magis
trate S. J. Clark and was awarded £5
damages and costs. Tho traction com
pany appealed the ca^e to the city court
When it came up for hearing, how
ever, the counsel for the company had
the case dismissed, paying the costs, as
well as the amount of the magistrate's
judgment.—Ealtimoro American.
in a store at Athens, Ga., stands an
Old fashioned clock that was made in
Liverpool. It hasn't missed a tick for 40
years.
v".v\er'$ PUIs
2?
1 with the vii»w
:\it usefulness amliu'.aptnhUify.
sire 'copiposed of the piuet,
e.g'.'Uibl? aperients. Their dei!r*nlo
•vipir-coating, which readily dis
solves in the stomach, preserves
Liic-ir
full medicinal value and makes
tiiem easy to take, either by old-or
young. For constipation, dyspep
sia, biliousness, sick headache, Uid
the common derangements of the
Stomach, i.iverf
and
Are the Best
Unlike other cathartics, the efTect
of Ayer's Pills is to
icine,
strengthen
the excretory organs and restore to
them their regular and natural ac
tion. Doctors everywhere prescril§
them. Iii spite of immense compe
tition, they have always maintaiin-d
their popularity as a
family med
being in greater demand
now than ever before. They are put
up both in vials and boxes, and
whether for home use or travel,
Ayer's Pills are preferable to any
other. Have you ever tried them?
Ayer's Pills
Pr# pn: Dr. 3 Ayer It Co., Lowell, Ma*«.
8ld by all Druggists.
Every Dose Effective
COMPOUND
AiweptdSeoowy by tm nla
gtoydleiyfc BytemifuBv ttmd
ered. Bewmreof iraprbtetpied
draggtoUi wjjo offer terafpr
iota— to piooapC tfal*. Auk tor Cook's Corffi
rCOBTOvSlit taiinomdmHtwb,orlacloaetland
ite to poirtM* totter, M4w* will «m(L
partteuiars In
No.
8
iUblrBtock,
1*
trull.
iUob.
UrSeM Madison by F. C. Nrmth
druggist Woods & Co., O. Tweed and
E. Wood every wnere.
(THADK MAMS MCGtSTSKSKJ
mm
tit oiuur
HINDOO RKMgDY
r*om:*Hs THE ABOVK __
msnri/ra i» S» »AV«, Orm
NVr km
is WjfOiUMM, FaUfnir Mi.enorv
!»r*»i», Kifhtly KmiV
viicur lu shrunken «r|*M,«tc.
.... .. (ja&jrwi
la vaHi
cai««rtifivc*
by punt abutw
«0*i
s
and quickly Out wureiyrwifcr**
(u»
________ K«ATZ, Iteglatet.
11111
""f
l'"
7
Notice.
Mind Ofltca Mitchell. Sotrth D«kou, Aug*at
SB, !«W, Notice in her« l»v that Hi# tot
lev
in* warned *ett!erh»» Mlc-d notice "f his iuteurlon
to make final proof fn cupiorl of bin vlatin and
that *»i(l proof will be mad* the clrrk Of
the Mrcnft cotirt, in and for Lake coonty,S. i» ht
Mad!»t»n, », !)., on October 14th, via.: John
W. Hurry, fur the northen'et unart«*r of flection
1", fownahip 105, N., range 5S,W.
17. fownahip 105, N., range 5S, \\\. 5th p. (T
Wj He nnn»! the IoIIowIdk'wit
ne»»o« to prove In# conttnuoim recidence upou
and cultivation of i»id land, viz.: OeorveWahhev
Henry Stoncfleid Albert Stonefleld nui neriiJ
Peteraou, all of jladiaoo P. O., H.
K. No. 14!l6!ij
Notice.
So,,lh DHlcotft
Augnat
A ISS'S. Notice hereby ven that the follow
Inir named aettler has died notice et her inten
tion to make final proof in support of her claim
and that eald proof will he made before the clerk
ol the circuit conrt, in and lor Lake conntv 8
D.,on October It, 1H!«, viz: M*riah ISarton!
widow of Smith Barton, decea»el, lor the Kk
•ecuo. 17
tawB.blp
lot, range -W, (H. E.N*
«,»«).) Hhe uamen the following wltneascH to
prove her continaoas residence apon and culti
vation of, said land, viz: Joaeph Creea, of Ka-
Oliver, Hdgar Lanehlln and
U. U. nil, of Xfariisgiij S. L,
R. u.E
'1
EATZ,
KeKUter.
Land office at Mitchell, 8. D., Angust 98,1898.
Notice Is hereby given that the following named
settler ha^tiied notice of hi® Intention to make
final proof In sopport of hia claim, and tnat »aid
proof will be made before the clerk of the circuit
court, and for Lake county, S. D., at Madi«on,
8. D., on October 7, 1HIW, viz: Wm. Carrott, for
the Bection 1, township 108
n
ranee r4 w.
5th p. m. (II. E. 29,415.) u« names the following:
witnesses to provs his continnous residence
upon and cultivation of, .aid land, viz: Oeorge
o ?i?th5w*y *u1
r!o
Kotice to* Creditor*.
In the county court of the conntv of Lake.
State of South Dakota. In the matter of the es
tate of Abner D. Hadfleld, deceased. Notice is
herehy given by the undersiunert, C. .J Button
administrator or the estate ol Abuer D. II
ad field!
deceased, to the creditors nf, and all persons
ciainiB the PAid deceased, to ex
htbit them with the necessary vouchers, within
four mouths after the fir^t publication of this
notice, to the said C. J. liutton. administrator,
at his place of business, in the city of Madisou
In the county of Lake, South Dakota.
Dated at Madison, S. I., rtOjtnsi 18. ltm
., o. j. button
Administrator of the Estate qI D, Bad-
*_
Notice.
State of South Dakota, Second judicial circuit.
In the circint court within and for Lake couu'„y.
J. H. Williamson, plaintiff, vs. Frederick T.
Day, defendant. The state of Sooth Dakota
sends greeting: To the above named defend
ant: Yon are hereby summoned and required to
answer the complaint of J. II. Williamson, plaio
tiH, which will be filed in the office of the clerk
of the circuit conrt, within and lor said
Lake county, at Madison, Sou-.h Dakota, and
•erve a copy ol your answer on the sub
scriber at his office in Madison, state of
south Dakota, within thirty davs after the
•ervice of this summons, exclusive of the
day
or
service, or the plaintiff will take judument
against you for one huodred and fifteen dollars
IVt|1J\nt«re«,t percent, per auunm from July
lo, lMt, besides costs.
l)«teii at Madison, S. D.. this 5th day of June,
W
Bowel*
aiso, to check colds and levers,
Ayer's Pills
J. fa. WILLIAMSON,
Plaintiff's Attorney.
To Frederick T. Day, the above named de
fendant: Take notice that the complairt in the
above entitled action and referred to in the
above summons, was filed in the office of the
clerk of the circuit conrt of Lake county, state of
South Dakota, in the second judicial circuit
thereof, in the city of Madison, *afd conn,
ty and state, ou the5th day of June, 1893.
v
J. H. WILLIAMSON,
Attorney for Piaint'ff.
Notice.
twistf ©Wee fit Mitchell, s, D.. Anim^t 2 1OT3
Notice is hereby jjiven that the follp-*iujf-named
sett er has filed notice of her intention to make
final prmif in sriptH.rt of her claim, and that said
proof will he made before the e'erk of the circuit
court, in and for Lake comity, at Madison
south Dakota, on September lfi, lwni
iz: Christie A. MctiUlivray. lor the
northwest quarter section 81, township lOfi
noith ran ye TA west. (T. C. E. 14Vt»). she names
the lollowinc witnesses to prove ber continuous
residence upon and cultivation of, said land, via
'JU
J°hr*to3,
J. D. McLoud
and Dean MeKae, all of Winfred P. O.. s. D.
it- N. KltATZ, Heeisttr.
Summons.
State of South Dakota County of Lake. In
Circuit Court, Second Jud rial Circuit. Gabriel
V\. Becker, Plaintiff, against Charles Weil and
Jacob l'reyfus, partners, dointr business under
Ihe firm name of Weil, Drev fns & Co .Defendants,
"he StaU* of ^out Dakotn greetinc. To
the above named defendant*: You are hereby
summoned au«i required to answerthe complaint
of Uabriei W. Becker, plaintiff, which was filed in
the office of the Clerk of the Circuit onrt and
tor Luke county, state of South Dakota, on the
4th day of September,
A.
I). 1«KS, and to serve a
copy of your an«wer on the subscribers, at their
office in the city of Madison, Lake county, South
Dakota, within thirty days after the service of
this summons upon vou, exclusive of the day of
service, or toe plaintiff will take jndtrment
against von for the stim of Ten Thousand Four
Hundred Dollars, with interest from date hereof,
besides crsts. Dated at Madison. Lake County.
South Dakota, this 4th day of September. A. D.
it?*?'
D- D-
HOLDHIDO& «fc SON.
Plaintiff i Attorneys, Madison, Lake
county, 8.D.
Mort^aee Sale.
#3.90
madeawsu
OF
ut surely r«
Mtawttnod In *1,1 «r young Riwil
jNX'kfl. #1,041 a pftck&lff Si*
writtrnrueniiUi l® fmmor mouttf
any n iprJrK-ti»i«-l amggtol n»• yrm
imitation. Insist on haTlM III HA
tM hfMS ti'fl f( i!.w- Will K.-H.1 It !,y mn.il upon
price. 1'smjitil' in •eaSed envelope fr**
ilri«-»tai Mr4l««l C*, flrmmtM PlMr, Ottm$•» Bk
v
Default Laa been made in the conditions ol a
5?. irtK^£S
conta,IlinK-power
of sale dated April
2nd, 18S8, and recorded on the 3rd day of Mav,
lrt*, in the office of the Register of Deeds of Lake
county, Territory of uakota, now State of South
Dakota, in book "I"" Qf mortgage*, page 15H,
whereby William B. Wood and Emma E. Wood
his wife, mortKajrors, mortgaged to Ueo. H.
Brace, mortgatfee, the west half of the west half
of the southeast quarter of section 7, township
K*i, KatU'e 54. in said Lake county, S. D.. by
which default the power of sale has became oper
ative, and no net
ion or proceeding at law has
been instituted to recover the debt secured there
by or any part thereof. The amount claimed tot
be due on said mortgage at the date hereof is
besides the sum of $50 attorney's fea
stipulated for in said mortgage Now notice ia
hereby given that by virtue of said power, saut
mortgage will be foreclosed, and said premise*
sold at auction by the sheriff of said county, oip
hs deputy, on Monday, the 23rd day of October
IH!W, at lo o'clock a. ro., at the Iront door of Urn
court bouse in Madison, K. D., to pay said debt,
attorney's fees and disbursements allowed bjf
law. Dated Stoux Falla, S. D., September 8th,
O. H. BRACE Mortgagee.
Paul 8. Kkowlm, Attorney for Mortuagee.
HOTfSI..
WORLD'S FAIR, CHICAGO.
HOTEL-
Calum- A^^nnor.nd Xithflt.' t.
Firepn r.x.r.is nnar
Grounds, hufh* u ever?
American aiui Pur
n a ujhA Awm Anicr»(',u) Riiu
SANCRO^T
Do ym wtw them? Wiieti next In Med fey
,iir
W. L. DOUGLAS
S3 8HOE aoVWs.
•est In the world.
43.00
44.00
•2.50 #2.00
12.28 11.75
|9 00
ro,t B0Yft
41.75
If yon want %tm MESS SHOE, made In the latest
ftyles,
don't pay $6 to
$8,
try
my
$3, $3.50,$4.00or
$5 Shoe, Thw ft equal to cuitom made and look tad
wear as well, IfyoBwIshtoiconomizelnyotirfbotweaf,
do to by porchulng W. L, Ootigfas Shoes. Name a«l
price stamped tm
tho
bottom, look for it when you buy
W. I~ DOOOIiAl,
Brecktoa, Mass.
Sold Mfi
THE FAIR,
^LMiSlUCABEJuKropa'
X- ...
V
MADISON
Hi
A
of Ka-
mona, and C.|H. Brown, ol Oldham, s. D.
K. N. KltATZ,
R«KiBt«r.
the
b'A"
v N
A
OF SOUTH DAKOTA.
A Large Number of State
Meetings are held at the
Chautauqua Grounds every
summer.
I*AKK MADISON, three and one*half miles southeast
of the city. Connected by Motor line
1«» THE
Freight and Passenger Division of
the S. M. Div. of the C., M. & St.
P. R'y running north and west.
Fine Brick IO-S13II Round Ho"se,
MATvrsmsr
Is a great Grain Market. Seven El
evators, Flat House and Roller
Mill.
Lake County has NEVER Experienced a
Crop Failure.
CITY PROPERTY
And FARM LANDS can be purchased at reasonable
prices. HOMESEEK.ES are cordially invited to settle
in this community.
For additional particulars concerning the resources of
this section, prices of City Property, Farm Lands, etc., etc.,
address
r/v
i
•TIHKjMkia^a
—IS LlQHTID BT—
llLAl/iOxJiN ELECTRICITY.
The Streets Illuminated by 12 Arc Lights
The Most Complete Plant in the State.
State Chautauqua
ASSEMBLY GROUNDS)
The Lafe provided with
the Steamer "City of Mad
ison," capable of carrying
150 persons.
i A Beautiful Sheet of "Water, Eight
Miles Long and Two Miles "Wide.
Two and one-half miles west of the city
surrounded by beautiful groves
of natural timber.
MADISON
A
Great Ictiiaf Center!
The seat of the State Normal School. Value of Normal
buildings, $55,060. The Normal School is now in ses
sion, with over 250 students from Yarious parte of the
state in attendance.
Excellent City Schools. New Central School build
ing recently completed at a cost of $20,000.
MADISON
Is the home ol Nine Churches!
Excellent Society. Stone and
Brick Business Buildings
CPS, B. KENNEDY
Madison South Dakota.
i V
K
Yf
11
re
fo
nr
re:
of
tO
CO
Oil
k 11
Ml
te.»
in*
•MS
11)1
wi
trt
tlu
iilj
the
IV]
tiu3
tiv
lav,
tioi
Vn
vi si
the
V:e
IS
fc.ad
tha'
nrj
toxq
11m
W
gen
Itep
It j)
age
rt-qi
v«iu
valu
1 ay
bt'tv
vain
that
Vfiln
u v 1
t'c cc
"1
hi.
1
tu
i:
tii.ul
•'Xv
'act ii
cii'cu
crt-at
with
valM
con si
a It-i
want
board
spent
vath
•ij'-y,.
nt
rj •"•t
mana