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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 29, 1904)
THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 29. 1904. 5 - I t 5 ' V .jf. at!' -'1. f ' A - . -""- J i -r Vv 1. S J'y TTXTjfayJs $ f VS&& ' J I r To be a successful wife, to retain the love and admiration of her husband should be a woman's constant study. Mrs. Brown and Mrs. Potts tell their stones for the benefit of all wives and mothers. mDkab Mrs. Pis k ham : - Lydia E. Pi nit ham's Vegetable Com pound will make every mother well, strong, healthy and happy. I dragged through nine years of miserable) existence, worn out with pain and wearineRS. I then noticed a statement of a woman troubled as I was, and the wonderful result she had had from your Vegetable Compound, and decided to try what It would do for me, and used it for three months. At the end of that time I was a different woman, the neighbors remarked it, and my husband fell in lore with me all over again. It seemed like a new existence. I had been suf fering with inflammation and falling of the womb, but your medicine cured that and built up my entire system, till I was indeed like a new woman. Sincerely yours; Mrs. Chas. F. Bbowx, 21 Cedar Terrace, Hot Springs, Ark., Vioe President Mothers' Club." Suffering women should not fail to profit by Mrs. Brown's ex periences ; lust as surely as she was cured of the troubles enumer ated tn her letter, just so surely will Lydi E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound cure other women who suffer from womb troubles. Inflammation of the ovaries, kidney troubles, nervous excitability, and nervous prostration. Read the story of Mrs. Potts to all mothers t " Dxab Mrs. Fctkham : During the early fiart of my married life I was very delicate n health. I had two miscarriages and both my husband and I felt very badly as we were anxious to have children. A neighbor who had been using Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound advised me to try It, and I decided to do so. I soon felt that my appetite was increasing, the headaches gradually decreased and finally disappeared, and my general health improved. I felt as if new blood coursed through my veins, the sluggish tired feeling disappeared, and I be came strong and well. " Within a year after I became the mother of a strong heal thy child, the loy of our home. You certainly have a splendid remedy, and I wish every mother knew of it. Sincerely yours, Mrs. Ajtxa Potts, 510 Park Ave., Hot Springs, Ark." If you feel that there is anything at all tmu3ual or puzzling about your case, or if you wish confidential advice of the most experienced, write to Mrs. Pink- ram, Lynn, Mass., and you will be advised free of charge. Lydia E. Plnkham's Vegetable Compound has cured and 18 curing thousands of cases of female troubles curing them inexpensively and absolutely, lie member this when you go to your druggist. Insist upon getting lydia Em Plnkham's Vegetable Compound MEMORIAL FOR DEAD KNIGHT Knla-hta of Columbus Hold Service In Honor of Late P. F. Hellly. In iremorinl of the lnte P. F. Rellly, who died October 21 of this year, Omaha council No. 6.2, Knights of Columbus, gathered with Its wives and daughters In the Kilts' lodge last night and joined In a prayer for the repose of his soul. The hall was well filled with friends nnd fellow knights of the deceased when at 8 o'clock the Knights of Columbus quartet, composed of C. R. Miller, C. P. Morii.rty, E. C. McCormach and T. V. Swift, began the service with the fitting song, "In Absence." During the evehlpg the quartet also sang "Lead Kindly Llsfht" and C. R. Miller saig "Some Bweet Ia" , H. V. Burklcy also con tributed a song to the service. The solemn roll call and memorial services Nolan and the name of P. F. Rellly being three, time called, the answer came "pbsent." Rev. P., A.' McQovern, chaplain of .the council, delivered ah oration on death. "Life," he said, "Is defined as eminent action. Death Is the ensxation of life, the separation of the body and the soul, for through the soul we have life and b -lng. The aeparatlon Is not pleAaant to contem plate. ' No man properly desires the cessa tlon of being; It Is tmly the- cessation of sorrow and of pain and labor that is do sired. It Is not the thought of death that Is terrible, It Is what lies beyond the grave. The flowers and the beasts are created according to their kind, to live their course of life. Man Is given Intelligence to do according to the law or not. He Is re sponsible for his actions. Ood requires the subjection of our wills to His will. Like the flower which Is deprived of moisture, so man misses the best in life if he does not live according to the laws of nature and of graco as well. While we are to live according to the dictates of reason, we must live up to the law of Ood. We are riven an authority to Interpret the law of God In the holy mother, the church. If we are. to enter Into light we must obey the commands of Ood. Herein lies the terror of, death." Father McGovern closed the service with a prayer for the deceased. A requiem mass will be celebray-d In the Holy Family church at o'clock this morning. BACK ON REGULAR TRACKS Park and Special Walnut Hill Cara Ran on Sixteenth Street Today. The Sixteenth street cara and the Walnut Hill specials - will resumo their regular routes this morning. This announce ment Is made todny by the tercet mij.vay company. The work on the paving has progressed so far that the cars will not be Interfered with In passing along the street. There is a reason, and the best kind of a reason, why Ayer's Hair Vigor makes the hair grow long and heavy. It is a hair-food. It feeds the hair and makes it healthy and strong. Healthy hair grows, keeps soft and smooth, does not split at the ends, and never falls ouj. - Give Ayer's Hair Vigor to your gray hair and restore to it all the deep, rich color of early life. M.vtU bjf th . O. Att O , twU, Mam. Aiet nm(ftinHirsT f AT '8 CBTtT PSCTOBAL-Fot coats. ITER'S PILLS-For oaitipatloa. AfUt'S SAkAAPAkiLLA e tlM kiwi. AlaaVS AG IS CDS- of aulana aa4 SO. PASSING OF A MORAL SPASM That ii How Dr. Oesrg L Killtr Charao teriMi the Present Sitnattat, CONSERVATISM, NOT RADICALISM, NEEDED Some Reflections Oeraalnnea r th Speeches at the Reeent Pnnlle Meeting tailed fcr the Clrle Federation. OMAHA, Nov. 27.-TO the Editor of The Bee: Macaulay once said: We know no spectacle so ridiculous as the British public In one of its periodical fits of morality. In general, elopements, divorce and family quarrels pass with little notlre. We read the scandal, talk about It for a day, and forget It. Put once In six or seven years our virtue hecomes out rageous. We cannot suffer the laws of re ligion and decency to be violated. We must make a stand against vice. At length our anger Is satiated. Our victim U ruined and brokenhearted. And our vir tue goes quietly to sleep again fur seven years more. Moore's Life of Lord Byron. Omaha Is rapidly recovering fronvsnother spasm of morality. Into which an atrocious crime was injected by some wild miscreant which shocked the whole community and caused universal Indignation and excite ment. Even with this murderous outrage added to the attack on social evils It was not as acute as that which cost the life of Watson B Smith In other days, al though, with the help of the newspapers, it was not without some danger to Innocent persons from a pretty Indignant public opinion. Excitement ran high. A public meeting was called by the organised mor ality of the city. Mahoner Ignores the Doctor. Having had experience with this sort of thins I ventured to ask Mr. T. J. Ma honey to use his Influence at the then com ing meeting at the Auditorium for "moder ation" to guard against wrong to "Innocent persons" who might be made victims of the popular feeling. I even risked the re quest to Mr. Mahoney to include Mr. If. W. Tates and Mr. Francis Prog an among the speakers, because Mr. Tates represents In rare degree the religious and moral forces of the community, and Mr. Brogan is eminent at the bar and a fine specimen of our higher cltlxenshlp. Neither of these gentlemen knew In advance the good use which I sought to make of their names, and I have never mentioned the subject at all to Mr Brogan. Mr. Mahoney was evidently nettled at my Intrusion upon the dignities and plana of the Civic Federat on, whose resounding name is so well calcu lated to Inspire awe, and did' not have the courtesy to answer It until he did It with a sneer In his opening remarks at the great meeting over whose proceedings he presided. I also sent a personal message to the Hon. Q. M. Hitchcock, member of congress, through Mr. Max Goldsmith, ex pressing a wish that he would aid In. re pressing what threatened to be wild ac tion. Mr. Hitchcock responded with a loud voice and long distance to denounce a great crime and the city gov ernment, and created all the excitement and bad feeling that he could with his conceded powers. ' Did Not Want to Stir Them l'p. Both Mr. Mahoney and our distinguished edltor-congressmun will kindly accept my apologies. I did not Intend to stir them up by my effort to persuade them to do what I considered a wise thing. If my moral sense had ben properly organised, we should have been saved from the Mahoney sneer and the Hitchcock eruption would surely not have been so violent. The chief engineers of our august Civic Federation did not want the people to hear the voice of conservatism from such men as Mr. Yates and Mr. Brogan. Members of that organization are men of high character and excellent motives, but they don't know It all when it comes to regulating public morality by statutes and ordinances whose execution is impossible, and the private conduct of good and bad, people by police clubs and eloquent orations. The alcoholic appetite and the baser, passions of man kind can no more be eradicated by stat utory, law than Niagara's plunging waters can be stopped by a puff-ball. Maine suf fered fifty years of demoralisation and Iowa ten, to prove that prohibition does not prohibit. And as to the social evil proper Father McGovern Is commended to study Lacke and the experience of all nations, even as far back as "Christ and Him Crucitled," which shows that neither the power of religion, moral appeal nor penal statutes has ever done moro than to bring upon that evil and the alcoholic evil stern and vigorous repression, which I always favor. Mar Be Able to Reason. It Is barely possible that by the time this article sees print sober-minded cltl leni of Omaha can bear to be told that their city is, after all, a paradise of law and order compared to what it was in other times, and that it is really not half as bad as It Is painted. I never saw bet ter order in any town of Omaha's popula tion Into whose midst criminals float as naturally as water runs downhill, than Is to be found in our residence districts. My own, for example, in the Hanscom park district, Is as quiet as a churchyard every da In the year. I never see a drunken or disorderly man In my neigh borhood. Even petty thieving le prac ttcally unheard of, and this, I believe to be true OI oiner resilience aisincis. Only two or three policemen on duty over wide territory Is all that Chief Donahue can spare from his Inadequate force, which Is expected to prevent crime In a town half the size of London on the maps, and to arrest, now and then, a fanatical fiend who goes out to a remote part of the city in the dead hour of night, unseen by mortal eye, and undertakes to destroy a home and family, whether any trace ot him can be found or not. Praises ChiefDonahue. It Is near the business , center of the city that the two great evils of society In Omaha, and In every other urban com muntty. mainly concentrate, and unfor tunately regulation does not always reg ulate and repression does not always re press. I know Chief Donahue very well, and I face all clamor against this worthy man and excellent officer to say that Omaha has, perhaps, never had a more compe tent or loyal chief In Its history. Good men. Just men. In our city do him and themselves great Injustice by Assuming that he can give orders to himself In the duties that devolve upon blm. He has no such power. And as to his loyal devotion to the special duty of hunting down the criminal who sought to murder a whole family, It Is within my personal knowl edge that his best faculties and skill, as sisted by Mr. Thomas himself and many more, have been applied with unflagging energy to his whole duty In the case. The distinguished citizens who attended the meeting last Friday evening knew this to be true, ss thousands ot others know the exact truth about It. I was surprised that hot a kind word In his support was spoken by them on that occasion. . Spasmodic, Kot Lasting. Spasmodic morality la not lusting moral ity. As Macaulay says, "It Is periodical, vents Itself on individual victims snd then goes to sleep again." In our latest up heaval public gambling was the main is sue. The Civic Federation assailed It two gamblers fighting each other, opened the way to exposure, and Chief Donahue, un der the orders of Mayor Moores. drove It out of existence. Is not this true? And aa to existing evils, I may not be as familiar with the haunts of vice and the saloons which. I believe, aa a rule, are well ordered aa profaaelonal reformers are whose business It Is to ferret ovt the vlo- s Mi ii I I IT1 " J ss JU - . Jv -T. aT- at- ..m V . Av ' ! ,;'V ' t NT. ' '"1 I: .,--;- t-i (, ! A:,.,;, . ft . , 1 . ; .'I . 1,81.1! - V',,-. nii'Jr:1 tmmmmmmmm 1 Li" I We illustrate here Tvo of ike most popular Overcoats worn this Season One the Straight Full Back Overcoat ihe other is the popular Belt Coat We belitve we have moulded more style in these overcoats than can be seen in any coati going by the same names to be seen anywhere else in America today. They're different, with that difference that results from what is called genius. The men who designed them have emphasized style according to their own ideas, and they have done well. The coats hang perfectly. We've tried them on several men of several different types of figure, and they are graceful on all.' These coats but illustrate what we have claimed for our clothing all along. We seek something better, we get something better, we have something better to offer you than anyone else has, arid it is'nt a question of price either. We won't sell anything unworthy for the sake of being able to quote a Beemiugly low price on it, but we will givo you the best value, dollar for dollar iti clothing here that can be had. OVERCOATS LIKE ILLUSTRATION SI0.00, $16.00, 520.00, 525.00 ious and the vile, but I do not ask any man's consent to say that Omaha Is an orderly community, and that Its people maintain law and order to as great a de gree as they do In any other city of Its slse and environments In the United States I go down town on Sunday and have taken some pains to observe the con duct of the people. I never see drunken or disorderly persons on the streets, but I do see well dressed and well behaved people on every hand, no noise,' no con fusion, not even In the vicinity of the sa loons. And what Is true of Sunday under my observation Is true of week days. Bad people are In our midst, undoubtedly, and they will continue to be here from genera tion to generation. I am willing to go on record to say that more murders are committed each year among small popula tion 1n country towns and In the farming districts of Nebraska than are committed In Omaha. GEORGE U MILLER. JOHNSON SOAKED THE WOMAN Debate Over Smelterman's Intentions as to I.esvlns; Town Grows Decidedly Tereonal. Ed Johnson, employed at the smelter, was arrested last night on complaint of Frank Stelner, who alleges that Johnson malici ously assaulted his wife by striking her In the face and making her nose bleed. John son, who lives at 1612 Nicholas street, ad mits striking Mrs. Stelner, but pleads Justification. He says she Went to his hnuso Inst night at supper time and fiercely re monstrated with him fnr his Intention to remove to the country With a party of set tlers who have purchased several sections of land and intend to establlah a colony thereon. He also says that when he would give her no satisfaction s to his Intentions she proceeded to kick him. It was then he struck her, and as Johnson Is a htisky Individual, the woman, tied no chance what ever to come out a winner'. - Johnson put up two f20 gold pieces as bail'-for his appear ance In court this morning. Announcement of the Theaters. This evening close tha engagement of "The Royal Chef at the Boyd. The sale of seats for the coming engagement of the all-star cast In "The Two Orphans" opens this morning and prcnraei to be viry lirga. No attraction recently has occasioned sj much interest locally as this, and well may this be so, for no other company has ever offered such genuine merit. It is the first time In history that si interesting a play has been given with such preparat'on. Each of the ten principal characters is en acted by a man or woman who has made a success as a star and the minor char acters are given to actors of known abil ity, so that the whole 1 Just what Messrs. Llebler & Co. claim for It the most mag nificent company ever organized to p'.ay a similar piece. "The Two Orphans" will be played on Friday and Saturday evenings and at a matinee on Saturday. . (HA(,K If TIME. Kew Servlee for'Kaasaa City. December 4 the Burlington's St. Louis Express will leave Omaha at 4:26 p. m. This train makes connection at St. Jo.eph for Kancas City, arriving at 11:20 p. m. A good, late afternoon train for Kansas City, saving sleeping car fare. Other good trains for Kansas City and St. Jupe.h at 9:15 a. m. and 10:45 p. m. There Is no place In Omaha to buy guar anteed goods a cheap as at A. B. Huber mann's Jewelry store, since 106 at corner Thirteenth and Douglas. Also Jewelry made to order and diamonds of own Import. Foot Ball Tonight. The Fort Crook team of foot ball pliyers will try conclusions with the Commercial college team at the Auditorium tonight. Reserved seats go on sale at 10 o'clock today at the Auditorium. There will be a wrestling match between halves. Game called at 8 p. m. , 1 Sam'l Purns Is closing out gus fixtures at net cost. NO SPECIAL SESSION LIKELY ConaressniDn McCarthy l.ooka for Only Such I.eicltlatlon aa Sug gested In Message. Congressman J. J. McCarthy of Ponca arrived in the city yesterday for the transaction of some business before the United Statei courts. "I shall return home before going on to Washington for the opening of congra s." he said. "I will leave for Washington about Thursday. I do not know of any special legislation that there is In view at Washington other than that which may be suggested by the president's message. We have received no Intimation that a special session will be called In March. There Is but little that I can say re garding conditions up In my district other than that they are at the best The peo ple are happy and conten.ei, crops are good and everybody is glad that four years more of republican prosperity Is assuisd In the eke i lor of President Roosevelt." Bank Gets Judgment. The First National bank of Omaha has been granted a Judgment in the district court for lo.mlO againxt Rowland W. Bailey, At the same time the motion of Bailey to have the Rex Stock Food company made a defendant was overruled, The dentist Is the possessor of fifty shares In the stock food conijxiny nnd some time ago gave his promissory note for the amount, securing It with the shares. The hank became pos sessed of the shares nnd asked the court to declare Bailey's Interest In them ended and to give Judgment. The court ordered Bailey to pay the face of the note at once or to surrender all cliUm In the stock, which the sheriff will then sell publicly. 18-K. Wedding Rings. Ednolm. Jeweler. Bogus Note la Detected. Captain John Webb of the government secret service bureau has Just received from Hersey, Neb., a silver certificate raised front tl to to. The bill was passed upon an express agent there and is a well executed specimen of the raised note. It is of a similar chnrac'ter to bills floated at Kansas City and rU. ijoultt nnd seems to have made Its way uninterruptedly into Nebraska as far aa Hersey, where the argus eyes of the express agent detected its spurious char acter. Fire at Fourteenth and Harney. Wright A Wllhelmy Co. will give a (Ire demonstration in a vacant lot at the cor ner of 14th and Harney streets Tuesday, November 29th, at 1 o'clock p. m. sharp, to show the Are extinguishing qualities of Kilfyre, the original, dry, chemical com pound. This demonstration will prove Interesting and Instructive to all property holders, manufacturers and merchants, and the pub lic generally are cordially Invited to wit ness the same. Notlre. The Inaugural entertainment and dance to be given by V. 8. oump, W. O. W., ani Poplar Grove, Woodman Circle, has been postponed from Wednesday, November 30, to Saturday i veiling, December 10. Re member the pluce Fraterr.al hall, Four teenth' and Dodge. Dixie C'leb Entertainment. Arrangements are belntr mu,l h th Dixie club for the first annual banquet of the members, which la to ba held i, tori A n entertainment la to be given Tuesday even ing at t'hambera' academy, upon which occasion the time and place and the ways and means will be agreed upon. A literary and musical program ia being prepujed fur the purpose of drawing out a large number. Each member is invited to bring at leut two southern friends to the entertainment and an effort will ba made to place upon the roster of membership every southerner In Omaha and vicinity. DIED. LONG Mrs. Cordelia, aged 59 years. 11 months, 4 days. Movernt.er 27, l4. at t'reston, la., wife of John J. Long, Omaha. Funeral from the residence, lua Vn-th Eighteenth street. 10 o'clock Wedne.-day morning. November ), lsu. liueiment Forest Lawn cemetery. Friends Invited. LOCAL BREVITIES C. G. Otto, a painter,' was arrested last night at the Orpheum theater by Officer Shea for throwing peunut shells from the gallery onto the heads of people In the lower part of the house. With an eye to the peculiar needs of the inner man at this time of year, a snenk thief yesterday sneaked a pancake griddle from the kitchen of the St. James hotel. To be sure of being able to make plenty of cakes nt one baking the thief took a two- root griddle that we shed s.xty pounds. The Omuhn police ure looking lor uavld Terry, a ginger-colored negro, who Is wanted at Lincoln on a charge of burglary. John Wilson, a chilly wanderer, yesterday stole an overcoat from A. Wolff, a pawn broker. The coat was recovered and Wilson will expluin his act in police court this morning. i Detective Mitchell yesterday went to Benson and recovered a valuable team, buggy and harness stolen last Friday from ieunnu at fnn, liverymen at Missouri Val ley. The outnt had been solir lo a business man of Benson, nnd the Council Bluffs nonce are now trying to caoture the thief who Is thought to have his headquarters in mat cuy. A supposed buntrlar was seen by neighbors io eiiicr inn residence at lsu uavenport street early Inst evening during the absence of the people who live there. An alarm was ent to the city Jail, but when the patrol wagon arrived the visitor, a negro, had made his escnpe. It is not thought that he secured any booty, If he was a burglar, because no report of loss has since been made to tne ponce. Saturday afternoon a boy went to the store of the Florodora Tag company, 1622 Douglas street, and turned In a bunch of tags io gei a nouoie-oarreieu shotgun. He did not take the gun,' but was to get It later. Shortly after another boy went Into the store, gave the name of the Isd who nad turned in tne tugs and tonic away the gun. The police have not yet caught the young thief. FREE TRIAL Myers-Dillon Drug Co., Druggists, at 10th and Furuaui Streets are allowing everyone a free trial of the famous Ken tucky remedy, rarueainQh. All you have to do, saya Mr. Myers, 1s to deposit 2oc for a bottle of I'aracauipli and use It as directed, and after using. If you are not satisfied, return half-used or empty bottle and get your luoney 2.V la returned to you. This Is really a f;ee trial, and you bare an assurance that It will be faithfully kept I'aracampb cures bad Cuts, bad Iirulsea, bad (Sprains, bad Sores, bad Ulcers, bad I'ulus. raracampli cures t'ain In the Heud. Pain In the Face, Pain in the Neck, Pain In the Shoulder, Pain In the Ilamlt, Pain that darts and runs and fitts. Paracainpb cures and for this reason you get your money back if you are not satisfied. l'aracouiph prevents Blood Poison. Men women and child ren should bo within easy reach of famous Kentucky Paracainpb. Don't risk the horrors of dreadful blcdd Poi son when yau are certain of instant relief If you use Paracamph at ouce. As soon as you are cut or bruised, rub Paracamph; stops the iurt. the pain; eases the mind and ueais U sore. No danper not a siujrie remote danger of Blood Poison wucn you use Paracampii. Now get a bottle of the household nec essity and if you are not satisfied when the contents are gone, used up, Myers lII!on Drug Co., willl refund the money. Paracamph Is made by the famous Kentucky Company. The Paraeam.ih Company. Incorporate for $300,t00; refer to Dun's and Bradstreet's Agen cies. We are convinced that the Paracamph Co npany Is reliable. Special Agents; Myers-Dillon Drug Co. mom i mm j 75 CHICA68 EiETUEiLJ TO A N D November 28 and 29 the Burlington offers round trip tiekets to Chicago for $14.75. 4m.;.' Three high grade trains daily. -mw;wi Take the Chicago Special leaving at 7:00 a. m. for a daylight ride. If you want to get to Chicago early in the morning leave at 4:00 p. i?. on the Burlington's No. 2. Most people take No. 12, the Chicago Flyer, leaving at 8:05 p. m. All these trains carry every equipment to make travel comfortable. The observation-library-buffet cars on the Chicago Special and the Chicago Flyer are as cosy as a club and as comfortable as the sitting room in your own home. , -i i t Tickets: 1502 Far nam Street. WANT) n- A BOY IN EVERY TOWN TO SELL OUR NEW SATURDAY BEE. 'It contains 18 pages of special magazine features, including 10 colored pages with BUSTER BJROYVN COMICS, altogether 34 pages, and is a big seller everywhere on Saturday afternoon, when the farmers are in town. We will send any boy the first 10 COPIER FREE. Four weeks ago we sent Clifford Hans, Germautown, Neb., 10 free copies and he is now selling 30 copies every Saturday afternoon, from which he, gets CO cents profit. You can do at well if you try. ' For full particulars write to " . The Omaha Bee Omaha. Neb. 252 Are U. S. Bonds GddJ? 252 v 252 BECAUSE THE GOVERNMENT IS RELIABLE Always That's the kind of a reputation we have been trying for 22 years to establish. Our coal qualitiesare just what we claim. We do not misrepresent poor etxil. We give our opinion in accordance with our information. Our dallvory tiokets ara our "bonds" and they repre sent exact weight sod corrct quality. , Wa have all the different kinds of coal, but only on kind of delivery servica ths best. "Yell-o" wag-ona and heavy, handsome horses. Ozark Gratfr. for furnace, $8.53 SUNDERLAND BROTHERS COMPANY 16th and Douglas Sfs, 252 Ifcf wa urUtara- r"1 4 rmalr. CnTSI iVMI Cut N C -i.iiun,ir MEHARDWOMflt. I hit U tor Basilars acti.ria..la3.um&iioott irrittloiia .r uioar.lloa.' at u u cull maatbraoaa, P.lalau, aad But uula. last or Bjoiaoaoua- rala tr Arasatata, or saut ia slais wrpa, t ai araaa. araaai. Im (I . ortJ!l.! Ti. Uu.uiaa- hu Kaaas) Sterna . 1 1 a n ,i in i t alii Mis" ..... i ii