fj? IMM3M1 Ill MMMMMIMMMIMMIJ v vrl KM m 'i. v v With all the grass, so lush in June, In haymows stored or stacked a-field, And July's harvesting in tune For such a glowing, bounteous yield; "With all the hot, midsummer days Garnered alike in weeks gone by "We wait the while the soft wind plays Through orchard boughs whose yield is nigh. And while we wait our play-day comes The holiday of all the year N "When Labor's noise no longer hums, And Labor's voice is heard in cheer. Then hey the picnic, is the call! And sports come on with leap and bound, The while we hear a voice "Play ball!" When merry Labor Day comes round. We pack our baskets or the wife And children do, with hearts alight All heaping full and seek the life That Nature whispers us is right. We all are boys and girls again, Although our brows with age are crowned! We are not women now, nor men When merry Labor Day comes round. What merry tales the women tell The portly ones we scarce would know As willowy Jane and slender Nell, In those dear days so long ago! What roystering yarns the men spin out While pitching quoits on springy ground, The other fellows' girls about When merry Labor Day comes round. ; And thus with sport the day goes by, The toil of all the year forgot; For cteaper 'tis to laugh than cry For man as well as little tot. God bless the holiday that comes Into our lives with such a bound! When Labor's noise no longer hums, And merry Labor Day comes round. Literature BAYARD TAYLOR. JUbor, yoa, know, is prayer. Toll to somo is happiness and net to others. BEECHBn. It Is not work that kills men; it is worry. Work, good, honest labor, Is healthy. Let a broken man cling to his work. If it saves nothing olso it will savo him. WHITTJEIt. f hino to work as well an pray. HOMER. Lbor conquors all things. ELIZABETH BROWNINO. Get work. Be suro it's better than frrLat you work to got. .&. on Labor ADDISON. Thero is nothing truly valuable which can bo purchased without palna and labor. Tho gods havo set n prlco upon every real and noblo pleasure LOWELL. Blessed aro tho horny hands of toll. SCHILLER. Labor is tho ornament of tho citizen. Tho reward of toll is when you con. fcr blessings upon others. SCOTT. Toll is necessary to tho enjoyment of leisure. BTJLWER-LYTTON. What men want is not talent, It lb purposo; not tho powers to achieve but the will to labor. TMnTTi emm Barbers Denounce ST. PAUL. MINN. Ways nnd means tq deprive the safety razor of its cllIzan'R right nnd dolnre II unconsti tutional, to nnnlhllato It, removo It from tho homo of every free-born American, nnd thus bring tho bnrber shop again Into Us own, furnished one of tho subjects for tho emotional dis cussion that took place at tho National Darber's Supply Doalcrs association convention hero. As tho Insidious lnfluenco of, the do grading safety razor fired tho speak .ere at tho convention to elonuont heights, these points were brought forth: Barber shops aro not so popular as they wero In tho past, Tho dark man with tho beard, In Rtead of permitting himself the cc stney of a 15-ccnt shavo, attacks him self with tho safety, In wild, carcfreo swoops, which aro equally Injurious to tho llfo and complexion of the victim and to tho profession. Accident Leads to BROOKLYN, N. Y. A score or raoro dogs of assorted breeds livened up things on Fifth avenue tho other day by becoming intoxicated on tho spilled contents of an overturned brewery truck. It is said by eyewitnesses that the drunken dogs acted almost "hu man" In the delirious frenzy which fol lowed their excessive libations. The truck, one or tlio motor variety, was chugging along Kifth avenuo be tween Ninth and Tenth streets, when it broke down and Its contents, sev eral cases of a very popular brand of hop bevorage, were spilled into the gutter. Immediately n golden Btreain, sparkling with tho pent-up efferves cence, gurgled and bubbled down tho gutter. Tho day was hot and all the neigh borhood dogs, most of which belonged to Fifth avenuo storekeepers, wero wandering about In search of water to drink. Blltzen, a graceful greyhound, raised her head from between her paws as she lay In tho doorway of a millinery es tabllblllllfclU and bnlned lliu air uua plclously. Tho couchant Blltzen be came rampant. Blame Middlemen MLSE HAIIJ AMD WKIlKtKS YOU a ' " REAL FARMFR ? INDIANAPOLIS. 1ND. An experi ment to determine how fnr a city can go In reducing the cost of living is to bo mado In Indianapolis under tho direction of Mayor Shank. Fol lowing a suggestion of Jumes Wilson, secretary of tho department of agricul ture, that municipalities take up tho question, (ho mayor appointed a com mission to make an investigation. These men will spend the next few weeks investigating conditions that are supposed to be responsible for tho high cost of farm and garden prod ucts. On their report will depend the city's action. Several yearn ago Indianapolis es tablished a market place for the pur pose of giving the people a chance to deal direct with producers and In thnt manner to keep prices as low as pos sible. Preliminary inquiry Indicates unscrupulous middlemen havo been bartering the market, buying up farm produce at wholesale prices nnd then ?$IE) (ARE 7l I BSBBaaBBV (vV x ". Divorces a Close Second to Wedding KANSAS CITY, MO. As a habitation of tho matrlmonlnlly distressed, Kansas City, nccordlng to figures Just compiled. haB Reno bncked Into obliv ion. Theso figures show that ono of ev ery three Kansas City marringes has Its finale In tho divorce court. In 1010 the figures showed that ono In every four marriages in1 this city wero fail ure's and tho great Increase in the number has caused much perturbation in the churchca. Various causes havo been given for It tho high cost of living, tho laxity of tho dlvorco laws, the grenter Inde pendence of women. Whatever tho cause, slnco January 1 thero hnvo been 1,900 marrlnge licenses Issued, und In tho same time nearly 700 divorce suits filed. This is an Increase In tho number of mar riage licenses Issued over n like period In 1910, but a proportionately greater Increase In tho number of dlvorco suits filed. Incidentally, more children from broken homes havo been taken chargo of by tho Juvenile court than In any similar period. Sociologists and min isters aro worried nt the showing nnd thero Is a demand for moro strin gent divorce laws Judgo Porterfield of tln juvenllo court also Is worried nt tho snowing, hut ho sees no relief In moro strlngont dlvorco laws. Ho believes that tho only remedy lies In mnklng require ments for mnrriago moro severe, and Btlll not so severe that Its result will be to drlvti muny persons Into com- NVS Vh'w1WVm'V.. How It Got Out. "Gladyb Maud promised faithfully that sho wouldn't breathe u whisper about my engagement nnd now it's all over town," "She kept her word." "I don't see how." "She didn't 'breathe a whisper.' Sho wrote it in a note " qSEL V . SA.'WS the Safety Razors Safety razors p onioto efficiency. If allowed to flourish thoy will ovontuatly accomplish tho ruin of Amorlcan man hood. Rome's celebrated slump was duo to just such Introductions as tho ornery safety razor. "And," finished ono of tho speakers, "after weaning Its owner from tho re finement of tho bnrbor shop, making him minister to tho demands of his whiskers across Ills own threshold, tho safety will gradually pall upon tho man devoted to It. Growing cnroless, the man will ono dny lay open tho In terior of his face with an unusually negligent swing of tho supposed 'safe ty razor, and what then? Tho man, being weaned from tho barber shop, docs not caro to return. He Is timid tho fault of the safety. Ho lotB his whiskers nssumo abnormal propor tions. Ho bccomoB a hotbed for germs. Therefore, down with tho tyranny of tho r. b." It was prophesied that In tho short span of n year all tho old ndheronts of tho stubblo beards and curved Adam'3 apples will be filling tho red plush chairs of tho shop. Tho safety razor, It was allowed, was all right for, tho more youths and tho trem bling hands of tho old, but further It had not just causo for existence. a Canine Debauch "Woof, my dears!" she bayed, and In 20-foot Jumps made for tho spot whenco camo the tantalizing aroma of tho wasting beverage Immediately every other dog on tho block, nnd somo others from adjacent blocks, realized that at Inst it was his "day." Following the lead of tho leap ing greyhound, they mndo for tho gut ter and eagerly began lapping up tho nmber drink. How many aching heads there wero next day In Fifth avenue dogdom will nover be known, but members of tho largo crowd which quickly collected to watch tho drinking bout aver that tho quantity put away by the canine tip plers was something to marvel at. Tho dogs, too full to find their way home, and loo dizzy tu .uuvigale any way, wore later led or carried to their homes by their owners. for the High Prices selling at whatever prices they could extort, thus forcing- all prlcc3 on tho nuuket upward. Somo have even gono so far aB to disguiso their employes as fnrmers nnd havo thorn tako their places In tho market with what were supposed to be farm wagons with fresh produce. It developed thnt mid dlemen control tho prices of four-fifths of tho produco handled on tho Indian apolis market and that they havo ad vanced tho prices to suit themselves. Comparisons mado botwecn tho prices of a fow farmers not taken In by tho middlemen with tho prices fixed at the market stands show that tho farmers hnvo been and aro selling food stuff at an nvorago of loss than one half tho amount fixed by tho middle men. Tomatoes, apples, potatoes and other staples havo been Bold GO per cent, lower by tho farmers than by tho market stand proprietors in spite of the city's regulations. Tho city government hopes to get at the bottom of tho situation soon nnd to dovlso means by which tho mid dlemen will not be ablo to grab the farm products and forco tho people to pay their prices. Tho farmers aro maintaining that they aro not respons ible for tho existing conditions and that tho high prices do not benefit tftcm. lgfe ICTll cer J A fiwonf f FEB. CKUELTY YOU GRUTf, mon law marriages. "Too many persuing many who should not," Judgo Porterfield says. "Thiu's where all this llvore trouble begins, nnd right thero tho lawmakers must begin It they nro to help condi tions. You can't leglslato divorces and biokcn homes out of existence its long an Just anybody can get married regardless of mental and physical de fects. Thero ought to bo a commis sion to pass on the meutal and phy sical condition of applicants for mar riage licenses, and on tho enrning ca pacity of tho men. Worthless men who can't oven support themselves marry, "Something will havo to bo dono or the pcoplo of this and other statos will find themselves tho keepers of a lot of degenerate children. A man and woman should bo required to know each other nt least six months before they are mnrrlcd. It would bo an out- I rage to make property restrictions, but the man should give ovldonca of nn enrning capacity and frugality thnt by stilct economy, would provide tho nec essaries of llfo for two at least. They should bo without such diseases as would bo bequeathed to children." Self-Educated. "But don't you think you could lonrn to love mo?" ho Inquired of tho beautiful hclross. "Pa always said I was hard to learn," sho replied, tnntallzlngly. "But I am not n book," ho protested. "Oh, I can read you, all right," sho answered. Judgo. ,n, A (EVERY -MC-r') '-MQ& DAY -HIC J -Cr xt)i 9ttr w lis X.S 1 r -Ll (flESSia 1 P" TZ& 4"Wk44"M"M-W4'4 H OME TOWN HELPS ALL CLASSES AID IN WORK Many Cities Devoting Energy and Vaat 8uma to Cause of Civic Im provement. It Is ono of tho practically hopeful phenomena lu cities making effort to became prosperous and comfortable, hero and 1ft Europo, thnt tho work Is not In tho hnnds meroly of art soci eties nnd "bonutlflers," but In tho hands of boards of trade, chambers of commerce tuxpayors nnd merchants' associations, Bhippors, manufacturers. Boston fnlt Itsolt declining, not ns an American AthcnB, but na a well let tho roport which stirred up hor business mon spenk for Itsolf: "Tho foundation of convenient thor oughfares Incidentally creates sites for important buildings. Aro tho court house nnd Symphony hall, Horticul tural hnll nnd tho Conservatory of Mu sic nnd tho Christian Sclonco tcmplu placed whoro thoy show to tho best ad vantage? How much thoy might hnvo addod to tho city If thoy occupied mon umental sites I "Our roport otters somo suggestions for atreet changes that will creato monumental Bites, as well n3 for cut ting streets through wnsto nnd desert ed districts nenr tho city contors, nnd for tho profltnblo expansion of tho city expansion that might bring dend land Into activity, ralso taxablo val uob, Increase tho uso of tho water front or hnrbor, nnd thus ndd to tho riches of tho city. "Tho fever for municipal Improve ment has also reached Sonth America and wo aro told that In Rio Janeiro thoy nro not only building lino docks and Improving tho harbor, but thnt n 9paco of two and n half miles long and threo hundred feet wldo has boon ap propriated through tho settled city from wnter to water for n boulovard ono hundred foot wldo and ovor a mile long. The snlo of tho ono hundred feet on either sido Is Bald to havo paid for tho wholo improvement. In tho short spneo of elghton months tho city constructed this benullful avonuo and gained nn enormous amount of taxablo property, "In Formosa tho Japaneso aro plan ning n capital. Mr. Fnshlinn, tho arch itect who tins tho design in hand, has recommended tho essential principles of tho original plan of Washington. "Those American cIUob which havo had time to think are devoting energy nnd vast sums of money to work of this or of similar character. They find that municipal Improvement not only tends to their own convenience, but also to attrnct strangors and to di rectly contribute townrd a city's mate rinl prosperity." PLEAS FOR THE PLAYGROUND Boys and Girls of the Cltlea Should Have Their Publlo Placea of Recreation. Horr Froobol, In "Tho Education of Man," snys: "Every town should havo Its own common playground for tho boya. Glorious result would como from this for tho entire community. For at this period games, whonovor It Is feasible, nro common, and thus dovolop tho feeling nnd desire for community, and the Inws nnd requirements of commu nity. Tho boy tries to soo himself in his companions, to feel himself in them, to wolgh nnd measure himself by them, to know and find himself with their help. Thu3 tho games di rectly Influen'" nn oduonto tho boy for life, awaken and cultivate many civil and moral vlrtuos." From tho eastern part of our coun try comes an eloquent plea for tho tondent of playgrounds at Pittsburg, tondent of playgrounds at Pittsburgh, writes: "From tho juvenllo court, from prisons, from hospitals, from students of social ovlls, from ovory depnrtment of science devoted to tho study of mnn, comes tho warning that In our day, as In no other day, tho world h&s yet seen, vre seed Is. our great cities to give hoed to tho naturo and spirit of childhood and youth and to tho right of tho pcoplo to happi ness. Society has not so much for gotten aa it has failed to realize In theso strenuous days of materialism how much modorn city and social conditions arc making void for many n fundamental tenet of our national cr.ocd. In tho boys nnd girls of tho streets, In tho delinquent, tho fallen, tho outcast, tho unuccessful and tha misfits thero Is tho samo hunger for hnpplness thnt Is our own. But if that hunger mu3t bo satisfied In the ono or two or three-roomed home of rh tenement, in tho street, nickelo deon, cheap theater, snloon or publlo danco hall, or not at all, who can wondor nt Individual ruin or social dlsastor?" Telllno a 8ecret. "Horace," asked his uncle, "what was tho subject of your graduating essay?" "Tho Alarming Prevalence of Hy perkntnbollsm,' " the young man an swered. "Whnt put such a queer topic as that Into your head?" "1 was racking my brains for some thing unhncknoyod, hnppenod to pick up n dictionary, opened It at random, nnd 'hyporkatabollsm' wns tho first word that caught my oyo. It was aB eaBy ns pie nfter that. Don't say anything about It, will you?" Beautifying tho Home. Whllo critics havo been calling loud ly for somothlng truo and originnl in Amorlcan architecture, thero haB boen quietly developing a typo that 1b really both now nnd nrtlstlc, saya CharlcB M. Cheney in tho Houso Beautiful. Discarding tho restrictions of tradi tion, a strong and vlrilo stylo founded ou tho best principles of composition and design Is asserting itself in tho small house, Beauty is arrived at through tho simple elements of construction. HARVESTER AT WORK Uncounted Miles of Bountiful Crops Make Glad tho Farmers of Western Canada. YIELD WILL BE RECORD ONE Practically Beyond Reach of Accident, the Fruit of the Pcrtlle Fields It Being Gathered Elevators and Rallroadi Will Bo Taxed to Their Capacity. On a bcnuUful Saturday afternoon, four weeks ago, tho writer started for a twenty-mile drlvo into tho country, from on of the hundred cr mere tics' towns that hnvo been well Btartcd dur ing tho past spring, In tho Province of Saskatchewan, in WcBtorn Canada. Mllo after mllo, and mllo nfter mile, was traversed through whnt was ono continuous wheat field, tho only rollof to tho scono being the roadways that led back Into other settlements, whoro would hnvo been repeated tho samo great vista of wheat. What a wealth! Horo were hun dreds und thousands, nna millions of biiBhols of whnt was declared to bo n quality of groin equal to any that hns ever been grown in tho province As wo drove on nnd on I thought of those follows down on the Board of Trado nt Chicago, St. Louis, Minneapolis nnd Duluth. Whllo they woro exploit ing each others' energies the farmer of Saskatchewan, AiDerta nnd Mani toba was contemplating how much ho would realize out of his crop, now past nny dnngor of nccldont, over what IiIb nntlolpatlona woro two months ago. Ono man said to mo: "Tho profits of that field of wheat will glvo mo sufficient money to purchaso 320 acres of land, for which tho rail way company Is nakhig JG.400, nnd pay It in cnBh." Another, with n Hold of flax It was Only 320 ncrcs said Stesrn Plowing in ho could do the somo and still havo a balance in tho bank. Flax produces wonderfully well, and tho current price Is about $2.50 per bushel. We then drove ovor Into another town ship, getting further back from the railway, and the main travelod road. Hero wo found ourselves in tho center of a Swedish settlement. Those form ing the settlement were originally from Nebraska. Invited to put up our horses nnd stay over for dinner, and a dinner that was enjoyed not only on account of tho generous nppotlto cre ated by tho exhilarating drive, but also becntiBo of tho clean linen, tho well-prepared dishes of roast fowl, po tatoes, cabbage, and a delightful des sert, somo of the history of tho settle ment was learned. Tho host and hostess wero modest In describing their own achievements, and equally modest ns to those of their friends, but enough wns learned to satisfy us that they had come thero about threo years ago, In modcrato, almost poor, circumstances. Most of them bad re ceived their homesteads as a gift from tho government, and by careful dili gence had purchased and paid for ad joining land. They had plenty of cat tlo and horses, some sheep and hogs, and largo well-kept gardens, showing an abundance of potatoos and cabbage and other vegetables. Their buildings wero good. Schools wore In the neigh borhood and thero was evidence of comfort everywhere. On to the Park Country. Reluctnnt to leave these Interesting pcoplo, the horses thoroughly rcstod, wre "hooked up" nnd driven on, un der a sun still high In tho heavens, with tha horses pulling on the bit and traveling at a 12-mllo nn hour gait over a ron1 that would put to shnme mnuy of the macadamized streets, we woro whirled along n sinuous drive through tho woods nnd then out In tho pnrk country. Hero wan another acono of beauty, groves of poplar, herds of cattlo, fenced fields of wheat nnd oats and barley and flax. Hero was wonlth, and happiness and surely content ment. The crops wero magnificent Tho BottlorB, most of them, by the way, from Iowa, hud selected this lo cntlon because of Its beauty. Its en tire charm was wholesome. Fuel was In abundance, tho soli was the best, the shelter for tho cattlo afforded by tho groves gave a splondld supply of food, while hay was easy to get. They liked It. Hero was a Bturdy farmer, with his throe boys. He had formerly been a merchant In an lawn town, his children had been given n college edu cation and one of tho boys wns about to marry tho accomplished daughter of a neighboring farmer. Through Land of Wealth. Tho Invitation to remain to supper was accepted, but tnat given to re main over night wna tabled. It was only a 25-mllo drlvo Into town over tho best of ronds, through such a Chess Players Mourn. In tho death of Albort do Roths child tho great fraternity of chess players hns lost a devoted brothor, ac cording to ono of tho Vienna biogra phers of tho lato financier. He was ono of tho founders and for many. years tho president ot tho Vienna Chess club nnd n devotee of thp royal game. "Not only in tho councils of the organization did ho tako an active pnrt, but for years he spent a part ot nearly every day at its headquarters whore ho attained a high placo as a player," says ono paper. --r rjMaWMBBBLMfiiii""m BiiiiiiiiHBBViBilHHrlEiEHU Bplendtd country, all one beautiful pie' turo, nnd such an opportunity to uw ono's Imagination In figuring up tk, amount of tho wealth of the crw! through which tho trip int town toe us, was not to bo njoyod every day.j And away wa started. J It waB delightful. Wo drove mr drove through avenues of wheat, which today, having yellowed wltk tho beneficent sun, is bolus laid low by tho reaper, stacked and threshed; by tho thousands of handi required 6 do It, and In great wagoas is feels taken to tho olovator. A night's ride by trala took through 225 miles of thin Rrwat prey- - inco oi oasaaicnewan inio tae south western part and from appearance It might have been as though a traaa fcr had been made acrosa a township. Thero wero wheat Holds, oat fields, barley fields and flax Holds, and maBf more that could not be aeon. Yet' thero thoy wero, and during tho nlgbt T?e had ysrsed throunh s COTtrr 2h- ilnrly cultivated. It wilt all socuro a market and get lta way to ocoan or local mill by means of tho great railway whose well-arranged systems aro penetrating ovcrywhoro Into tho agricultural parts. Proaperoua Alberta. Wo afterward went over late Al berta, and hero again it was grain adi cattle, cattlo and grata, comfortable farm homos, aplondtdly bwiK cities and towns; tho best of chvrefeos and the moat thoroughly equipped schools. Whllo talking with a Soutkera Sas katchewan farmer ho said that tto lnnd ho was working, and for whicb ho had been offered $60 an acre, bad ueen purchased five years ago far $12 an ncre, but ho won't sell. Ho Is making a good profit on his land at $60 on aero, and why ohouM ho aellf Farther north, lnnd was selling at from $15 to $18 and $20 nn acre. It was learned afterward that the soil was similar to that in tho south, the prlco of which tfiday Is $0 an acre. Tho climate was similar and tho mar kets aB good. In fact tho only differ ence was that today theso northern lands occupy tho samo position that tho moro southerly onos did five years ago, nnd thero nro found raeay who Western Canada. say thoy will como into a prtee nearer their legitimate value of $50 er $69 aa aero quite as quickly as tbe sutuory lands. And I believe It. Throughout all this greM euatar. practically 600 by 80 miles aqua, there aro still a great assay kosm steads which aro girca fre to'actaSt settlers. Many who have seevred par ents for their homestead consider their land worth from $lf to $25 tet acre. Immense Cropa Assured. Throughout tho southern portion of Alberta, a district that suffered mete or less last year from drovtb, theie will bo harvested this year me of the best crops of fall wheat, winter wheat, oats, flax and alfalfa that has ever been taken off theso highly pwduotrvo lands. In Central Alberta, which eeeapriees tho district north of Calgary aad east two hundred miles, through tbmroecv Sodgowlck, Castor, Red Deer, Wetas klwln, Edmonton, Lacomb; Tegre vllle, Tofleld, VcrmlUIoa aad a scare of othor localities, where are settled lnrge numbers of Amcriraas, the wheat, oats and flax, three weeks ago, was standing strong and ereot, large heads and promising from M ts X bushels of wheat and as Itgfe as 10 bushols of oats on caret!? tilled fields, while flax would yrebaMy yield from 15 to 18 bushels er acre. In these parts tho harvesters are busy today garnering this great oren nnd-lfwlll ahorttj-boknowBwtiether tho great anticipations are to be real ized. Throughout all parts of Saskatche wan, whether north, aoata, east er west, tho same story waa heard, aRd tho evldenco was E-scn of the splendid and bountiful crop. Rich Yield In Manitoba. In Manitoba it was the seiae. The fields of grain that wore passed through In this province promised to glvo to tho growers a bumper yield, nnd as high as 35 bushels of wheat and CO bushelB of oata was freely dis cussed. It would appear as if tho expecta tion of an average of S!6 Imekels ot wheat throughout the three Brevincee would be mot. In a fow days tho 40,00,e-buBhel elevator capacity throughout the coun try will be taxed, the 25,00M bush els capacity at Fort WlUUaa aad Fort Arthur will bo taken up, aad the rail ways and their equipment vial be called upon fcr their best Weeny the great, broad, yellow fields) are tedus trlal haunts, tho self-blnde 1st at werk In its giant task of ledsishig toto sheaves tho standing grass, the har vesters are busy stocking trod stack ing, tho threBhlng machines' are being fed the sheaves, tho large box iregosB are taking it to tho elovatora, aaid no matter where you go it to she same story and a plcfuro such as ea& only bo seen In tha groat grain fields ot Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta. Market for Human Hair. Tho quaint annual hnlr fair waa hold at LlmogoB, Franco, a fow days ago. This curious market brings the groat dealora in human hair and the representatives ot important halri dressers from all parts ot Europo, buy ers and Beliefs coming from Berlin and Rome, Spain and Austria, and from nil the great towns ot France. Fair and dark hnlr is seen there la great quantltlos, hut here aad there can be seen rarer plaits of, white hair, which with tho red, are sold for aa much as $60 and $70 a kilo. " ,-nv.wjHl Wiil H -a I t -A i s?l tvw .1 r - wJJMJ m Vi. ;, n " wF-, M Hi -l "71 ,s V'U .Ji "Sfl .- 1 ra - "JS 'I 1 ' i V A,? ,rr