A SUMMER OUTING. 'I l Pleasures and Benefits to Be De rived In tho Mountain! of Colorado. The days are here, when one begins to make plans for his summer outing, and studies railway maps and questions friends to learn of the best spots, and where the most varied amusements may be had for the least outlay. To Kansas people the Rock)" mountains are the most convenient and afford op portunity for the enjoyment of tastes of all shades. Twenty-four hours places the most eastern dweller of the state right In the. heart of the great divide and he has enjoyed such scenes en route, as wealthy tourists go across the ocean to find. The Denver & Rio Cirande road, the Great Scenic Route of the world, takes you at Pueblo or Den ver, and whirls you through canons where there must have been an en chantment and where giant arms have dashed the boulders into their present resting places. The ride through the Royal Gorge displays the great in genuity of its engineers, and the ob stinate determination of its builders. The rails are placed in almost inaccesi ble places, along the edge of the stream or torrmt. which with wonderful skill has been forced out of the way to make room for the rock road bed and the iron rails. At certain points the torrent maintains its supremacy, but the diffi culty is met and surmounted, a set of hangers being made into the cliffs overhead, to support the bridge work and track. The stream is still jubilant of its power over man, and laughs, booms and dashes by as the train passes, not caring for the queer shad ows that fall into it, if it can only be supreme at this critical point. The canon is one of the grandest in the world, barely wide enough, in certain parts, to admit of the stream and the tracks, the granite walls of giant moun tains towering above and over all. and giving a still more impressive object lesson of the great force of Nature which has caused it all. The climb is a long one. and after leaving Salida you think it is over and that as you enter upon a slight down grade, or a smiling valley, that you are now going to slide down into the great San Luis Valley. Never were you more mis taken; and if you look you will see two puffing little giants pulling the train for several hours yet. At length, how ever, when you have begun to wish for breakfast, the summit is reached, and there is a rapid stride down the west ern slope, and into the beautiful val ley. For more than fifty miles the track is as straight as an arrow, and the train speeds along bringing you into Alamosa for breakfast, right under the shadow of Blanco, the highest moun tain in this country. All around are smiling fields as far as the eye can reach, until vision is interrupted by the mountains which encircle the val ley. Some one has said the West Moun tain and the Sangre de Cristo range on the east are a ring and that Blanco Is the setting. These mountains afford every variety of amusement and enter tainment. There is fine trout fishing; in season there are plenty of ducks and Sand Hill Cranes. Brants, Geese and Curlew. These are in the valley. If big game Is desired j'ou must go back into the mountains, where Elk, Bear, Mountain Sheep and Lions, Glouse, etc., are still to be found. Outfit at one of the pleasant little hamlets and spend a monthjn these mountains and in this valley, if you want an outing. If you wish to meet the gay social parties, that make the mountains their home in summer, go to Colorado Springs, Man Itou, or some other of the delightful re sorts on the line of the Denver & Rio Graude roarL We kn6w of no greater advantage to heath, than may be gained by a sojourn away from the cares of business and daily duties of the routine of living. Here there is no routine but a con tinued change, of pleasure resulting more profitable to a tired body or over taxed mind than any other opportunity within reach. The Denver & Rio Grande Company looks after the comfort of its patrons with scrupulous care, and pro vides the best facilities for observation and enjoyment of the ride. If you have never yet visited these precincts, de cide now to do so this year, and get the rest and health you have been looking for. F. P. BAKER. hi t hoi-e. . At a viiiaire wedding in Worcester shire rtrentiy the clergyman asked the bridegroom the usual question whether he w; s willing to lake the woman to be his fdded wife, and, the rustle. Kcran-hir.? his head for a moment or two replied. "Ay. I'm wullintr. but I'd rather Iiae her lister." London Tele graph. I'nl.Iif Land In Oklahom.-. A careful investigation of the public records discloses the fact that there are yet several millions of acres of public lands in Oklahoma yet subject to home 's lead entry and settlement. It has generally been understood that all the lands in Oklahoma fit for agri cultural purposes are already occupied, but such is not the fact. Owing to the method adopted for the opening of these lands to settlement, in many cases as high as five or six persons would settle on a single track on the day of the race, and rather than stand the expense of a contest, or run the risk of other trou ble, would, unknown to each other, abandon the land. Again, the main race for lands at those openings was for tracts near the cities or proposed town sites and along the lines of railroads, and thus many hundreds of almost equally aa good farms as are In Okla homa were pasead over In the mad rush for homes. It is true that a large portion of the yet unclaimed public lands are more fit for stock-raising than for agricultural purposes; yet there are still hundreds of good homes awaiting the taking in that country and undoubtedly a large num ber of eastern people will take advan tage of the same the coming season. Household Marketing. In the matterof purchasing food, the housekeeper mu6t use good judgment, poinjr to market aDd not trusting the selection of her meats and vegetables to an ignorant order boy. A little ex perience will enable one to learn to know the best cuts of meats, and if the pnrketman sees that his customer i'inTvvs what she wants, and that she will not be satisfied with inferior meats.' he will serve her with the best. It i generally economical to buy the high 6t grades of groceries and meats, as the best goes further and is more readily susceptible to changes and va riat ions. BIG DAY FOR BEETS. NEBRASKA'S PROMISING 1NDUS I TRY ENDORSED. The State Convention Start With Much 1'roraUe and a Fine Array of Delegate Addresses by Congressman Melkle- . John, Governor Holcomb, Prof. Nichol son and Other Prominent Gentlemen. The State Sugar Beet Convention. The sugar beet convention at Fre mont drew a large attendance from all sections of Nebraska. . Secretary Xa son, in calling the meeting to order, made a brief address on the consump tion of sugar and the interest taken in its manufacture from sugar beets. Congressman Meikeljohn was then introduced and spoke in part as fol lows: Mr. President and iJentlemen cf the Convention: You have been convened under a call to consider a special sub ject of agriculture the encouragement of the cultivation and production of the sugar beet. I feel justified, however, when we contemplate the diversified products of our soil, in diverting for a time to invite your attention to the oc cupation of agriculture generally. The tillage of the soil increases in importance with the advancement of civilization, the augmentation of popu lation and the consequent sharp com petition in other arts and avocations. The condition existing: at the birth of our nation caused our forefathers to turn their attention to agriculture and it was guarded by earnest and zealous supporters. We see today in the west a people cultivating and producing this same product, which was cultivated and pro duced by the Egyptians centuries be fore the Christian era These observa tions lead toward a confirmation of that old maxim, "There is no new thing under the sun." Egypt was the gran ary of the world when Joseph opened it to Israel. She lighted the torch of civilization in the remote centuries of the past and blazed the way for "he westward march of empire. There is a growing tendency in this generation among our young men to forsake the field and gravitate to the cities to engage in commercial or other industrial pursuits. If this inclination is based upon a sentiment that this avocation of life does not carry with it the dignity of other professions, and that there are not the advantages for him on the farm as in other avenues of life, he should reflect on this expres sion by Cicero: "Of all pursuits from which profit comes, nothing is superior to agriculture, nothing more enjoyable, nothing more worthy of a freeman." The farmer today is confronted with a depression of prices for farm pro ducts, which discourages and dis heartens, but he should remember that he is not alone in his suffering from ex isting conditions. His distress is that of others in the many avocations of life, for whatever the occupation in an agricultural region none can prosper, when farming ebbs and declines. Ag riculture lies at the very foundation of our national wealth and prosperity and is the main pillar of our nation's glory and strength. THK BEST CHOPS. The consideration of the subject of diversification of farm products leads us to the inquiry of what crops can be introduced and successfully cultivated. There are many elements upon which the answer to this important query must be predicated. The crop must be one to which soil, geographical loca tion, and climate conditions are spe cially adapted. The diversification should be along lines where cost of transportation will be eliminated and the demand for the product will closely approach the supplj' to insure a just remuneration for capital and labor employed. The profits from the new industry should be as great or exceed those reaped from the crop which it supplants. iSermany and France found these ele ments combined in the cultivation and production of the sugar beet, and for more than a century has protected, nurtured and encouraged it until it has reached the importance of any other industry in the continent. When the great Napoleon was enforcing his con tinental policy of blockades, decrees and embargoes and putting forth his energy to produce sufficient sugar for his empire his enemy, England, was seeking through every avenue to bribe his chemists, disparage his undertak ing and bring ridicule on his efforts and endeavors. Caricatures were exhibited in Paris in which he was represented as squeezing a beet into his cofTee and his son, the young king of Home, as sucking a beet, and the nurse address ing him is made to say. "Suck, dear, suck; your father says it's sugar." We often hear it said, until with many it has perhaps become a convic tion, that the cause of agriculture nas j not had the fostering care and atten- t tion of our government, but has been j sacrificed in the interest of other in dustries. This unfortunate assumption j often hissed from the 'hustings'' ,for j sinister purposes, has had' a pernicious J effect upon public minds. The most j eminent men in public station-since the ; foundation of ouc government have zealously guarded and protected- agri culture. This is very clearly manifest ed in the debate on the first tariff. bill before congress, in: which agricultural products were given special rates of duty to encourage and foster them, and guarding the market from encroach ment by other nations whose capital and labor were employed in the same avocation. Our present status in regard to sugar is such that of an annual consumption of four billions of pounds we produce but one-eighth, and are dependent upon, foreign countries for the balance. For th is supply of foreign sugar we send abroad annually one hundred millions of dollars in gold, or its equivalent This is an unnecessary drain upon the wealth of our nation. N That the soil and climatic conditions are favorable to the cultivation and production of the sugar beet, has been f conclusively proven by scientific and practical research and - investigation. The development of the industry in re cent years in Nebraska, Utah and Cali fornia is a guarantee of its success in this country... .Every- pound of domes tic sugar manufactured represents in vestment of capital, employment of labor, an equalization of the production . farm pro individual and national wealth. The beet sugar especially adapted to the soil and climate of Nebraska, the continuous warm, dry weather produc ing itS saccharine strength, may yet be overtaken by the rains from heaven, to cause it to take on new growth, de creasing its purity or strength for sugar, and such a season we have just experienced here and in continental Europe. Is it good reason for our farmers of sugar beets to become dis heartened? We ought to be made of sterner stuff, especially in view of the fact that by later planting, much of such loss can be avoided and more es pecially in view of the repeated loss of other crops on which so many of our farmers almost wholly rely. . Agriculture will always maintain that rank in the future that it has in the past. Mankind is sustained, shel tered and nourished from the bountiful lap of nature, through the grace and her Divine Master. The j ground, the air, the sea, are her store j house. The barbarian, in his dark j ness and ignorance, is fed by the same j hand as he who is born in a land of j civilization and enlightenment, j The earth is the commissary of God I for His children. She gives food to tYw hungry, raiment to the naked ana pro tection to the unsheltered. Agricul ture is but her helpmate. It is the cre ator of commerce and manufactures, the forerunner of social development and progress and the bulwark of our national strength and glery. Humanity draws upon her for sus tenance, commerce turns to her foraid and support and manufacture invites her products to the door of a great in dustrial system, where sinew and brawn of toiling masses are exchanged for the bread of life. Governor Holcomb wasr introduced and delivered an interesting address. He said he come to the meeting to learn more than instruct. The real farmer is Nebraska's wealth. He thought su gar production offered a fruitful source of profit and it should be maintained until we have many factories. He dis cussed the plau of small factories mak ing low grade sugar and having a large refinery to handle their products. This is an industry that gives employment to men and women, and there is no danger of not finding a market for the product. Prof. II. H. Nicholson of the 6tate university gave a very interesting talk upon the scientific treatment, agricul turally considered, of sugar beets. One hundred and fifty years ago, when su gar was first discovered in beets, there was only 1 per cent of sugar, where it is possible now for beets to contain as high as 20 percent of sugar. The great est problem is seed. We are dependent upon seed brought from the old coun try. This seed is bred up from a low to a very high grade. We must learn to produce seed; but it takes several years to put a good grade upon the market- Seed that does well in the valleys will not do well in other places. By science we must produce something of uniform results. The factories must find a means of saving that which they now cannot use. nen mis is uone manv dollars will be saved. The pro- ! ieSSOr lllurUUIIljr laatusscu iuc Diuau factory question and at the conclusion he was compel iea to answer quesnuus for half an hour. Hon. I. A. Fort read a carefully pre pared paper on co-operative factories He went back into history and recited instances of successes from mutual co operation. At the present time we only have corporations, of which many disapprove. As law is a rule of action, he would create a law making a paid department in connection with the state university to give its entire atten tion to the production of beets and fac tories. Mr. Fort would have a factory established on the co-operative plan to refine low grade sugar, taking it from proposed low grade factories, this co operative factory to be under the laws of Nebraska and state officers to inspect and approve or disapprove its con tracts. Daniel l'arrell, Jr., read a well pre pared paper upon the subject, "The Heet Sugar Industry as a Factor in Manufacturing." In his paper Mr. Farreil noted thirty products that can be made by the factories, after the beet crop had been worked up Nebraska had good soil and sunshine and with these should forge to the front and compete with eastern sisters. The following officers were elected: President, R. M. Allen, Ames; secre tary, W. N. Nason, Omaha; assistant secretary, C McLernou, Sidney; treas urer, W." D. Whitmore. Valley; vice presidents, G A. Atkinson, Lincoln, D. Farreil, Jr., Omaha, ttert Mapes, Nor folk, W. li. Norcross, Beatrice, J. B. Cessna, Hastings, W. U. Reynolds, Chadron. LEGAL BRIEFS.. A Philadelphia woman who put her money In Atchison before the slump in prices sues the president .of the com pany for deceiving her in his roseate reports of the condition of the road. ' A St. Louis decision runs to the ef fect that a woman has an insurable In terest In the life of her fiance, even when the man is already married, but designing getting a divorce to marry the new sweetheart. The Massachusetts Supreme court has decided unconstitutional a law com pelling the railroads to sell, at ruling rates mileage, tickets good on any rail road. Michigan has.-, however, recent ly passed a similar law. ' After a fatal runaway accident In Polk county, Iowa, the coroner was persuad- ( ed by several of the leading citizens that there was no necessity for an in quest as to the cause of death. They j wished, as taxpayers, to avoid expense to the county, but the coroner haa now,' begun suit to recover hla fees. A fire broke out' in a butter factory near Madison, Wis. After all the water on hand-was used- 2.300 gallons of mil It were used in its stead and the fire was ; put out. Now the Insurance company is not quite certain whether it should pay for the milk as well as for tha slight damage done to the building. The wife of a Paris manufacturer ran . up a bill of 11,000 francs with a mil liner. This the court, without" disput ing -the items, has ordered cut down, on the ground, that the woman's hus band is not bound to pay bills which are out of proportion to his means and position, and that the dressmaker should have considered this point or re ferred to the husband before the bill grew so big. I How a little girl likes to say "Ob, you're going to catch it!" to a boy. and consumption of other ducts and an increment to What flatted the Fight. A Philadelphia man was arrested on a warrant, charged with assault and battery on his wife, and was taken to the central station for a hearing. His wife, on her oath, said he beat her so badly that she was detained in bed two da vs. When .Magistrate south asuea him why he had beaten his wife, the prisoner said, "Well, judge, you see. opened the door and threw my hat in side to see if it would be welcomed, and when she threw it out I was so mad that I went inside and licked her." Very Awkward Indeed. This is precisely the kind of mistake man makes If he "turns out" on the wrong side of the road when a vehicle comes to ward him. No less absurd is the error of the Individual who takes drastic medicines to relieve his liver. That orpan is on the rijtht side, and the road to its relief is liostetter's Stomach Hitters, a medicine also adapted to the relief of dyspepsia, constipation, kidney and rheumatic ailments and malaria. Floral Tracery on MetaL By chance it has been discovered that even the most delicate tracery of the petals of flowers can be reproduced in metal. During the trial of a new fuse the other dajr a small leaf fell between a dynamite cartridge and an iron block on which the cartridge was fired. As a result, a perfect imprint of the leaf was left on the iron. How's This! We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and be lieve him perfectly honorable in all business transactions, and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. WALDING, KINNAN & MARVIN, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, Ohio Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internal ly, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testi monials sent free. Price. 75c per battle. Sold by all druggists. Hall's Family Pills. 5c. Kleetri-ity on the Farm. Electricity is likely to be an impor tant factor in the agriculture of the fu ture, according to the Italian professor A. Aoli, who has collected evidence showing that both terrestrial and at raosnheric electricitv are favorable to the germination of seeds and the growth of plants. The Modern Way Commends Itself to the well-Informed, to do pleasantly and effectually what was formerly done in the crudest man ner and disagreeable as well. To cleanse the system and break up colds, head aches, and fevers without unpleasant after effects, use the delightful liquid laxative remedy. Syrup of Figs. Manu factured by California Fig Syrup Com pany. A Professional Exchange. Life: A doctor who occasionally walked in crooked paths and never went to cnurch was called to see a pious and orthodox old clergyman who had been taken suddenly ill. 'Am I going to die, doctor?"' asked the parson. "Well, I guess not this time," said the doctor. "We'll make a bargain you keep me out of hell and I'll keep juu uuiui utaivu. Hurrah for Fenniylvanta. The farmers of Pennsylvania are to be congratulated. M. M. Luther, East Troy, Pa., grew over 207 bushels Sal zer's Silver Mine Oats on one measured acre Think of it! Now there are thirty thousand farmers going to try and beat Mr. Luther and win $200 in gold! and they'll do it. Will you be one of them? Then there is Silver King Barley, cropped on poor soil 116 bus. per acre in 1895. Isn't that wonderful and corn 230 bus. and potatoes and grasses and clovers, fodder plants, etc., etc. Freight is cheap on seeds to all points east, west, north or south. If yon will cut this out and send it with 10c postage to the John A. Sal zer Seed Co., La Crosse, WTis., you will receive their mammoth catalogue and ten packages grains and grasses, in cluding above oats, free. w.n. Any girl old enoush to take a seriously, is too old to get one. valentine Notice. Drs. H. H. (Ireen & Sons of Atlanta, da., are the greatest dropsy specialists in the world. Cure more patients than the entire army of physicians scattered over this beautiful land of ours. A val uable discovery outside any medical book or published opinion. Removes all dropsical symptoms rapidly. Ten days' treatment mailed to every suffer . 1 i . T er. Bee aavernsemeui. column. in other A GREAT CHANCE TO MAKE MONEY. Mb. Editor: I read how Mr. Jones made money. I have a better job taking orders for the new Fireproof Deposit Case for storing deeds, mortgages, noted, policies, receipts, monev and valuables from fire. Every family or farmer buys. I sell for World Mfg. Co . ( V 26) Columbcs, O. , cleared 127 first week. 39 second, first month f 147. sister made $23 last week selling National Dish Washer for same firm .Light, easy work, honest firm, anvone can make money by writing them. J C BARRET. George Elliot is said to have 'Middlemarch" in four months. written Cm'i Cowgti Balsam Is the oldest and best. It will break an Cola quiets, er thu au y thine else. It is always reliable. Try 1W Chicago, sells 10,000.000 worth of hides every year. Piso's Cure for Consumption has been a God-send to me. Wm. B. McClellan, Ches ter, Florida, Sept. 17, 1895. There are about 14,000 miles of street railroads in the United States.. Motkera who . BMd Parker's Ginger Tonie for years Insist that It ben. 11 s more than otber medi cines; eyery form of distress and weakness j leld to It Weekly wages for skilled land vary from $6 to S 11. - labor in Eng- niadercarns Is m Im1 reavvdy, but it tak out the corns, and what a consolation it Jsi Makes walking a pleasure, lfro. at druggists. , . It tho Baby is CstUag Teetu. Besure aad use that eld and well-tried remedy, Mas. Wwslow's Sooth lira Srxvr for Children Teething. Motley took six years to write "The Rise of the Dutch Republic." . - PITS All Fits stopped free by Dr. Kline Great Nerye Restorer. No Fits after the nrstdays use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2 trial bottle freeta l it cases. Bend to Dr. Kllne.131 Arch t.,Phila., fa. Every man needs a wife to apologize for him. . . . .-' , A Cocgh Shouij Not be Neglected. "Brown's Bronchial Troches" are a simple remedy and give immediate relief. Avoid imitations. The world's wheat crop of 1894 was 2,471, 742,129 bushels. Billiard table, second-hand, for sale cheap. Apply to or address, H- C. Aktk, 511 S. 12th St., Omaha, Neb. A New PoKtolIioe. The United States government has established a branch office in the great seed establishment of the John A. Sal zer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis. So larere and extended is the trade of the Sal zer Seed Co.. that the government for their own convenience to promptly expedite mail matter, located an office in their mammoth buildinps. The editor is told that Salzer's great plant, seed and grain catalogue is mailed free to any one upon receipt of 5 cents post age by addressing them at La Cro66e, Wis. Nearly 1100,000 worth of whetstones are produced every year in this country. J There are children 9 C without food. They cry (? j for it, and are not an- 5 t swered. The pity of it! 3 But often nature cries out 9 in other ways that her (J children need nourish- 9 ment. Is your child thin; (J 5 actually poor in flesh? 9 J Does it get no benefit (? J from its food? Then 9 give something which (? produces flesh and maks 9 J rich blood. SeotlB etriufetoru i of Cod-liver Oil, with h C Hypophosphites does i more than this. It C changes the unhealthy 5 action to one of health, J thus removing the cause. 5 It acts on the nervous t system, which controls (J J all the processes of the 5 t body, toning it up into 5 sound and vigorous ac- 3 t tivity. It is food for J growing bone and brain. J t It makes the thin plump; 3 the pale, ruddy; the C weak, strong; it feeds 2 and cures. JUST AS GOOD IS NOT SCOTT'S EMULSION. o rm - As good as can Be made regardless of price other Brands for 97 Dont take for it, but and see for yourself A Perfect Bood ?! ! . ....... ... ... . : jm a SiSBBBBBBBB BBk ' SBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB That Is what Baron von Lidbig said of good chocojate. All of Walter Baker 8c Cos Cocoas and Choco lates are good, the best, In5 fact. . Walter Baker & Co Ltd Dorchester, Mass. Dss si si m mm sx r. N CURE OVER ALL FOR B anm n-f-s ffm l n Neuralgia. V A Sciatica, k 1 All J' W 5 U1L nT i wVrVNrvVv'VV 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 SMOKING TOBACCO, 2 oz. for S Cents. CUT" SLASH CHEROOTS-3 for 5 Cents. Give a (Jood, Mellow, Healthy, Pleasant Smoke. Try Them. LYOS 4 CO. TOBACCO WORKS, Durham, H. C. 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 9 To) Lm TKKATKU FKEE, Positively Cored rltli Vegetable Remedies' Hare cared thousands of oa. Cure canes ri nounoed taopeloxs br bent pbynk-lans. If roin first lior rrmptom dlnappear; la trn days at least two-tbiict all nymptoms remove.!, fcend lor free book tetim niala of mlrauIouH cures. Ten day's treatment tit by mail. If you order trial scud 10 In stamps to pa' postage. Da. H. H. Gcr.RM fc Bonn, Atlanta, Ga. It you order trial return tbls advertisement to us. A'titi n.K.iwK.. dons half th") trorld's vi.iUuii;i biisirjev, lnwiauso It has reduced the cost v.icd puwer to 1 i Hfiui It was. It has many brauefc notisfts Ktipiiiit's its gooas aurepairt at your lor. it rna aud does lurnisn e br'ttbr ar-t;cl for less money that. others. It makes Pumping and Geared, Steel. t.-iJvanlzed-afte-Cu;npletlun Windmill, Tiltlbr and Fixed Steel Towers, Steel Butj Saw Frames. S'.eel I-'eed Cutters and t'r Grinders, on application It will name onr 11 of thesw articles thai it will fumL'h nnti; January 1st at f. the tiscal price. It alno make Tanks and Pumps of all kind!;. Send for cat&iogn;, Fcctory : Hlb, RcckT.e!l and Fillmore Street:, Cbfcrs PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Cleanm and bt-actifU tha bare. Promote a luxuriant growth.. Never Fails to Beetore Oray Hair to it Youthful Color. Cures M-alp ditavr ft hair tailing. SMOKE YOUR MEAT WITH hCiRC ular. E. KKAUSEJt BRO.MiU0N.ft. Dntonto Trarfo-Marlfc I Olulllwi I muy iviuiiwt Examination and Advice as to Patentability t 'nvention. Swdd for " Inrenrors Oaide, or How t Oe ; rattnt FATncr ctazsxll. WAsmsaiQsr. & c o mice tldD. cemfs our word buy'a piece, A 1 irltz. KJIUU Q as sn m n'tnn V 11 W4 MM