fr? iMMh W> la their woolen tab* t , f Are fiaylngaehool with the a, NiK;' A*al I,o! All the cattle spell TIB they make the blatant i»s«l*ldt And half a laugh whinny fllle the stall* \f WhM*ea la the nek the clover falls. rf?. \ ibm Is aallaliiif around bis mate, * Two 1 In meal black on his wings of slate. And (bowing at with a wooing not* « £ The satin sUae of his golden throat—* Alt Is Ovid's “Art of Lore” retold In a biadfcg Ana of blue aad gold. %■ Ah, th* buxom girls that helped the boys, ® The aoUar Hehmn of humbler Troys— As they stripped the husks with rustling fold / Bra eight rowed corn as yellow as gold, . '. By the eaadle Hght in the pumpkin bowls, Aad thaglaaam that showed fantastic holes la the quaint old lantern’s tattooed tin, Vtam the huindl glim set up within; j Ay the rarer light in girlish eyes As dark as walla, or as blue as skies, I hear the laagh when the ear I* red, 1 aae the btaah when the forfeit’s paid. ^ the cedar rah as, with the ancient twist, - ■- .The etdar eng* that the girls bare kissed, And I as* the Iddler through the dusk As he twangs the ghost of “Money Musk!” The hoy* and girls in a double row £ Walt face to face till the magic bow Shall whip the tone from the violin Aad the marry pulse of the feet begin. ■ . • MISS MIIiDRED’S WABHISfl. £ ( - “There, giris!” Eifrida Moore held aloft before us a dreadful image. “A home-made ghost.” she called it/laughitig at the terrific re sult of her half hour of sedulous occu v ^^twas horrible! We had been reading, that afternoon, about the Princess Amelia, the ill-fated / sister of Frederick, king of Prussia. :-:v One thing brought up another. And when an suasion was made to the |“wo ; man with the broom,” who is said to , have haunted the Prussian palace, at that time, EHrida sought a carpet brush 4 with a long handle, in the closet at tin head of the stairs, and. standing in the outer chamber alone, began to dress it artistically la a sheet, by way of show ing ns her asm idewof tfie phantom that ,, troubled the rest of Prussia’s kings. We girls wore alone in the wing cham ber,, which had been allotted for our oc cupancy by Miss Mildred Fay, the own - sr of the lovely farm, and the comforta ble, old-fashioned farmhouse, in west 1 f ere Pennsylvania, where our parents and other friends were spending the ear * ly vacation months of the opening sum mer. One other girl, Elfrida's first cousin, ''Evelyn Moore, shared the wing chamber ’ with us. She had now gone to the village, two miles distant, for the evening mail. And Bfiiils who was somewhat en vious of Evelyn’s superior scholarship, social psritlon and good looks, declared that she would leave her “woman with the broeca” so near the door of our — ./dumber, end in such a position, that it would Imwllably fall against Evelyn as soon ap she entered to bring ns our let ton. “She seye that she is afraid of noth-' ing—that she does not believe in ghosts and apparitions, she said to us. Now let’s try bo courage. We will hide in the unfinished chamber, outside, where W can and hear all that passes be • tween her dnd my phantom.” While we were eyeing the image from a respectful distance, and feeling half afraid of the hideous face and the flam ing eyes, which Klfrida had drawn with a few touches of her crayon and a little phosphorus od the white surface of the sheet, a rustling sound and movement in the outer chamber made us all huddle »’ together and strain our eyes fearfully to ward the dusky entrance. We all felt relieved, I think (I own that I did, for one), when our hostess. Miss Mildred, emerged from the gloom, and mitered oar room without pausing to . knock. ' 4 Klfrida tried to thrust the home-made ghost into a corner, quite out of sight. E But it was useless to try to conceal from Miss Mildred's searchingly comprehen Mriv« glance the hapless apparition. V “Which of you girls made thief Why ■ ^ did yoc make rtf’’ she askad, holding it I out at arm’s length. I Klfrida told her. L “And please. Miss Mildred, don’t tell I Evelyn, ^»aaid, coaringiy. “Weonly A wish to l*OlbfM|br she is really ■ bfaver about such dnwd than we are. P She aaya she is; and shX.dsel»red the oman with frightened seen and ,ia the pas asked en, gray s«ther evening that the reaT ^2* “°‘fc*v*Y . Aer te the least—if she , heard her sweeping, I mea ; *b« royal nalaoa.” ■ «n Mien m Miss Mildred, beading her . I owned that I had i_ Marion Herat, wit? * half-averted, timid look at the A*readful object, that ■nrUbinm V"? hostess, declared' that she had no d«.'t whatever. could help feeling terrified at rfcifrtd*. “No < suddenly upon \ n sight coming ’them,” she averred. '• “Ton are none at yon without vour fair share of common sense,” said Miss Mildred. “And yet you can deliberate ly plan and aid and abet a deed like She tossed the image out into the dark open chamber. With an angry exclamation, Elfnda was springing after it; but she found herself lml | back by a strong hand. “Ho, pi Is! that same thing haa been dooe in, I lis very house once before: Wait till 1 tell you what came of it be fore you try again to cany it out-" At the thought of hearing a story, El Wdalorgot her momentary anger, and <»owded in beside us, near the chair at the window, where Miss Mildred had now sealed herself. . 12lSJao*ted *l “® v«ry sadly. The hatr-ngat may have deceived me, but I ■ ““ugat then, and I still think, that her keen gray eyes were full of tears, as she »o speak. „ , “1 not always live here bymysclf, jJJi* the old homestead,” she said, "rwe and twenty years ago my dear mother ami father were here; and I had • dart'ng brother, one year older than wqrnaM, named Oliver, and a sister, yoaagsr than either of ns, who was call ed landurs, dUr dm heroine of a story that my mother had read, and liked very much, fast batata bar birth. was always tall, and thin, an< m i ~Hir Mr *'i‘ inert blue ««■. wff Susr So?. **"» ^Whiil that lovely th»i . •**«?-*» ^ T2fS?S& IboUghtt] Uwt was an artist’s ideal pic was the image of our Iaadore at ^ yead of age, replied Miss Mils drod, trying to cover the sudden break and tremble in her voice by a loud -'•Bern!” . , **Aad »t Sixteen she was far beyond that painting for beauty,” continued Miss Mildred. “Strangers used to stop in the street to look at her and inquire who she was. But she appeared to know nothing and care nothing about her wonderful good looks. She was good and gentle, and always amiable without the least apparent sign of van ity. “ ‘Ripe for heaven,’ onr good _ old minister used to say. I wish she might have gone there then!” said Miss Mil dred with a stifled groan. “She did not die, then!” exclaimed Elfrida. “I was so afraid you were going to tell us of her death !” “She did not die—God help herP’ re* plied Miss Mildred, with a sigh so deep and sad that it was almost a groan. “Here, in this very wing chamber, my brother Oliver thought of it,” she said, after a long pause; “here he called me to help him decide liow-to carry out the' plan. You see, girls, Isadora was like your friend Evelyn—she possessed great courage. She seemed to have no fear of anything on earth. Oliver knew this; so did I. And neither of us ex pected anything more than a. hearty laugh at her expense, or at our own, when the evening frolic ended “It vy Hallow tm. Isadora and her dearest friend, a Nancy Bruce (who lived then at the farm just below this one), bad agreed to try their fate, with ‘spells’ on that evening. They ‘dared’ each other to one thing and another,and finally Isadora pledged* herself to go in to the lonely old north rooms, with a candle, at nine o’clock that evening,and eat an apple before Grandmamma Thorne's great mirror, that had been stored away there for safe-keeping for fifty years or more. “You see, girls, the idea was that her future husband’s face was to appear to her, looking over her shoulders, in that mirror, as she stood before it eating her apple. “Well, Oliver overheard the girls planning this that afternoon, ana he told me, and, as I said before, I helped him here in this very room, that even while lie disguised himself in along white dress, and painted his face all over a deathly white, with heavy, frowning hlack eyebrows that formed a black arch across his forehead. “It changed him terribly, and he look ed so like a corpse in that shroud-like dress, that I was half scared myself at him. But neither of 11s thought of laa dore's being frightened. “And so we stole into the north room, and contrived to get the mirror out of its frame. Oliver put his face into the vacant space. I hung the drapery around it, and charged him to keep per fectly still, and then stole away to watch for fsadore in the hall. “Ip a few minutes she came down the stairs with her candle and apple in her hands. She was smiling rogueishly to herself as she opened the door of the north room and went in.” “And what happened?”asked Elfrida, eagerly, as Miss Mildred paused. “Where was your mother? How could she let Isadora go into that dread ful room?” breathed Marion Hurst. “Father and mother were both stay ing with a sick neighbor as watchers that night,” said Miss Mildred; “and I watched and waited, in the. outer hall, till Nancy Bruce came crying, down stairs, to tell some one what they had planned to do, because she thought something awful had happened to keep Isadora so long in the north room. “When Nancy saw me_ she caught hold of me and dragged me with her to the door of the north room. We went in. The candle was burning on the table. The apple had fallen to the floor. Beside it my brother Oliver was lying senseless, in a fit. His face looked like white lire, in the half darkness. The poor foolish boy had nibbed phos phonis all over it, after I left him, to make it look still more ghastly and ghostlike.” “And Isadora—where was Isadora?” cried Marion Hurst, beginning to shiver with nervous dread. “We found her huddled down Jin a heap in a distant corner, with her face to tne wall. She knew no one. Oliver told us, long afterward, that she stood gazing at him in silenee so long that lie advanced his face toward her, through the mirror, meaning in play to offer her a kiss. “The light, the life, the intelligence, all went out of her own face at that mo ment,” he said. “She fled and crouched down in the corner; and he, believing then that he had fatally injured her, fell fainting to the floor.” "Poor fellow!” sighed Elfrida. “Where is he now, Miss Mildred?” “In heaven, 1 hope! He was one of our first volunteers from this town, and one of the first officers killed in the last war. They told me that he exposed his life in leading his men into action. 1 did not mourn for him girls; I knew how (/lad he was to go. Our parents died heart-broken one year from that fatal Hallowe’en.” “But Isadora, where is she?” asked Elfrida, half fearfully. “At the State Lunatic Asylum. At first, she seemed ouly idiotic, and I kept her at home devoting my life to her, as some small return for the wrong that I had helped to work. But she is now a raging, raving, dangerous maniac! Oh, girls; there is nothing left now of the heantiful child, or of the l*veiy girl! It | Vas all our fault!” said pdor Miss Mil dred, bursting into tears and hurrying out of the room. Elfrida's eyes were wet, like ours, as she brought baek and silently demol ished the fearful “woman with the broom.” And Evelyn Moore, returning an hour later with the letters, never knew why we girls greeted her so kindly and lovingly, upon that one particular night. How to Return « furor. An old Scotchman was taking his grist to the mill in sacks thrown across the back of his horse, when the horse stumbled and the grain fell to the pound. He had not strength to raise it, being an aged man, but he saw a horse man riding along, and thought he would ask him for help. The horseman proved to be a nobleman who lived in the castle hard by, and the farmer could not mus ter courage to ask a favor of him. But the nobleman was a gentleman also, and, not waiting to be asked, he dismounted, and between them they lifted the grain to the horse’s back. John—for he was a gentleman too—lifted his cap and said: “My lord, how shall 1 ever thank you for your kindness?” “Very easily, John,” replied the nobleman; “whenever you see another man in the same plight as you were in just now, help him, and that Will be thanking me.” Orators are in demand up in the oil regions. The Petroleum World says: “If some first-class public speaker will oome here ami take the stump and take it clear out of the state and keep it there the ssseeaiga is over, he eaa draw tpatUl us lor a V iriw.u»» Of wool MltyivliMi TV. bird knowihow to do And place the twigs serose. And when she had built her little borne With help of loving mate, One mom, X peeped Into their room, And three speckled eggs she’d laid. I watched the tiny little bells Till btrdltngs, one, two, three, -ytt I saw within the moss-lined walls, No larger than the bumblebee. And then the nest Wss eren fall,7 Ot little fledgelings grown Almost as large as parent bird, How soon they will be gone. Tea, naught la left, for all hare flown To sunnier dimes than ones, Nor grieve they for their early home In those Elyslan bowers. Tet who can say, bat another year, When the maple spreads her leaves, That our little friends may tarry here And rest beneath our eaves. God’s wayB are truly marvelous; o’er all His tender care we see, And if he “heeds the sparrow’s fall,” He’ll uot forget the little pheb$. — Western Bund. The Art of Sleeping* Most of the men who have made their mark as successful leaders have been good sleepers as well as hearty eaters Najioleon Bonaparte lost no opportunity either for a good sleep or a good meal. Even before going into battle he would take a few hours for sleep if possible. The duke of Wellington was such a sound sleeper that he seldom moved from the time he closed his eyes until he awoke. He used a very narrow bed, and said that when it was time for a man to turn in his bed it was time to get up. Henry Ward Beecher is known to be a good sleeper. He falls asleep in a moment after his head touches the pillow. These men and other great workers have had a faculty which is an important addition to the mere taking of sleep. It is the power of withdraw ing one’s self from all surrounding persons and objects and finding imme diate rest in slumber. The man who can thus take rest is refreshed and strengthed under many circumstances which, would keep other people weary and wakeful. He is master of every situation as regards his own rest. Some men, by long habit, iind themselves able to sleep with the same ease that others would take a glass of water. They can sleep either while perched on a high stool or rattling along in a rail road car at forty miles an hour. The economy of wear and tear on such lives is wonderful. The man who cannot sleep unless he has first removed his clothes, put out the light and climbed into his bed is at a great disadvantage. Greater yet is his disadvantage if he can sleep in no bed but his own. There are some who are possessed with the notion that their own bed is the only one in which they can slumber. These peo ple are utterly wretched when they go to the country, where the beds are stuff ed with straw or shavings, and where the springs are made of noisy material which resound whenever touched. When they go to Europe and are forced either to stay awake or to sleep in quarters not much larger than the shelf of a mantle piece, their misery is too great for ut terance. Much of the comfort and dis comfort experienced in sleeping is the result of habit. There are some people who toss on their beds for half the night, as if they were uneasy ghosts. They have never learned to sleep. It is the power to shut one's self with in one’s self that constitutes one of the approaches to heaWrful "sleep. There are objections to sleeping in church which itteed not in this connection be re counted. But the hian who has by pa tient habit accustomed himself to slum ber under a sermon, can learn to sleep auywhcre and under any circumstances. He is sometimes seen in a snug corner of a street car, when several ladies ap pear on the platform seekingseats. He often finds it convenient when a bore addresses him to be able to subside into slumber. When his mother-in-law wea ries him with protracted discussions on uninteresting subjects, it is ever so de lightful to sleep, or to seem to sleep. Good sleep is a blessing from heaven, and he who can sleep whether flics crawl on him, mosquitoes bite him, cross peo ple scold him, or noisy children dance and play in his presence, is blessed in deed. _ Talk up Your County. Friends, talk up your eounty and speak a good word about your neigh borhood, not only when you are abroad, but when you are at home. Don’t go around looking as if every man was your natural enemy, ami you were hope lessly tied up in a community with which you had no sympathy and no common interests. Don’t rundown the county and berate your fellow citizens to every stranger you meet, but brag them up. Tell strangers you have a fine county. Don’t deceive them by telling exaggerated stories or untruths, but don’t take a delight in making promi nent every little mismanagement of public affairs and every little circum stance of your county’s history that was not just according to your own ideas. Tell the strange visitor that your people are hospitable, and prove it to him by introducing him among your friends. Let every man speak well of his neigh bors anil his county, and induce stran gers to settle there. When a stranger locates near you, make him think well of you and your neighbors. If there be a bargain in a piece of vacant land near yon, help to get that bargain disposed of. When it is in stronger hands and out of the market, it will stiffen the price of all lands surrounding it. Get your farms into the hands of men out of debt and able to hold them, and you will see a boom in the real estate mar ket. But so long as there is a farm for sale under the pressure of debts, the price of other lands will be influenced thereby. A vacant store in a row of business houses injures the rental value of aU the others, a demand for one more store than can be had has the contrary effect. Prices of land are effected in the same way. _ Good for the Formers. Hartford Timet. It would seem that the farmers, by a recent discovery, are in a fair way to be transplanted to the seventh heaven of delight. That annoying said destructive peaf-the potato bug—whose advent a jew years ago into onr agricultural dis tricts furnished the small boy employ ment at two cents a quart, in snatching them from the potato vines, can now be utilized. ' It appears that a Maryland farmer, who was opposed to the use of Paris green in destroying bugs, arranged a large kettle of boiling water in his field, and his hired men and boys gathered the bugs and dumped them into the i scalding water. While Paris green is known to work well, no doubt this is “a good way, too,” as the vender of a cer tain patent bug poison once remarked. He was asked now the powder was used and he replied: “Veu, you catch ze leetle bng, pinch him, and when he opens he mouth, drop ze poison in, and quite soon he kick ze bucket.” ••Thandsrf" exclaimed the other, “why aot put the ineeot on the floor aad stamp on him with your boetf But it mm **t fetal* had the potato bon mU discovery that nqrwmiti and may increase the small boy’i MF centagein gathering the atop te mm >«nto per quart - «r<-1 About two gallons of the been gathered and so ~ water, when by aecii piece of old sheepskin_ lining shoes, fell mferthtt the cooking had been hour, the farmer was, that the leather had ci the richest dark crimson, perimented with other and was surprised to I that tin Mould first changes them to adarit Ntova, thsa |fcm yellow to a greenish blue,then toai_ next to light blue, then to 4mi blue, followed by light red; and humi**11*! in the brilliant scarlet, which waa tin permanent color. The firmer is now*l work forming a joint etoeki'eanupaa] to manufacture dyeing mixtures iron tiie boiled down esseaea of the" potato bugs, The cochineal, or cocus insect, is used in dyeing crimson ami scarlet, and it the preparation of the eannina and lab colors. It consists of the bodies.of tbr females of the coccus eaeU, wkhfi feed on plants of the cactus family ^nd then is a kind of prickly pear that %qultiva tod in the West Indies, Mexico and Pen for the sake of this valuable coloring insect, Which feeds upon it. 4 .pound of cochineal, in its drmd state, contain about 70,000 of these valuable .insects. The male is Of a deep red color, will white wings. The female is of a | color, with no ‘wings, her covered with a white, powd3r-f stance. These insects are killed 1 _ ing water, as the Maryland farmer kill i'if his potato bugs, or they are baked it a hot oven. The coloring principle ol cochineal is carmine acid, in its crude slate known as carmine, and combined with alumina a carmine lake. Now, what is to come from the potato bug discovery? Who knows but the farmers will yet go to raising potato bugs for market? In such an event they may introduce an article of commerce equal to the cochineal and valuable to the world. Happy pvosnkts ynt foi those who have potato gelds. 1 Jesse Brant’s Bride. > San Francisco Chronicle. The engagement of marriage which lias existed for some time between Hist Lizzie Chapman and Gen.-Grant’s thinl son, Jesse, has been kept so quiet that society can scarcely realize that the wed ding is really to be. The approaching nuptials of Ulysses Grant, Jr., and Jdisc Jennie Flood have been such a fertile topic of discussion that the oresenoe ol Jesse has generally been accounted foi as being connected in some vague man ner with that affair. That two of the great general’s sons should succumb U the attractions of San Francisco’s daughters was not even suspected, ex cept by a favored few, prior to the an nouncement in the Chronicle, some time since, and even now that the arrange ments for the wedding dre in the course of preparation, the existence of the en gagement has been so carefully con cealed that society yet hopes that there is some error in tne announcement, and that the Pacific metropolis is not destin ed to lose one of the brightest stars in its social firmament. Miss Chapman is the daughter of W. S. Chapman, the wealthy capitalist, whose bold and gi gantic operations in real estate have been the subject of so many newspaper articles. The young ladv is a petite demi-blonde with a wealth of the light est light brown hair, and soft light brown eyes. The bridegroom elect, Jesse Root Grant, was 33 years of age last February. He was born inlEMpib rl and received his education at Corhfl] university, from which institutio* be graduated, receiving the degree at B. 5. Shortly alter his graonatiowj he traveled in Europe, devoting Me atten tion to mining engineering. On Me m turn to the United States he engaged in the broker business with A. Honore, Jr., under the firm name of Grant & Honore, and is at present a member of the New York stock board. In appear ance Mr. Grant is very prepossessihg, and about five feet ten inches in height^ and well proportioned. An Artful Russtaf.^ * London Dally News. Count Loris Melikoff, on receiving the appointment to the high^position he holds, resolved to put airoml to nihil ism in a practical, business-like man ner. One of the first steps consisted of i ipening negotiations with two nihilists of high rank, who were confined at Fort Paul. After personally communi cating with the prisoners, he released them from confinement. At the same lime they received a pledge from Count Melikoff that the persons whose names had been divulged as being prominent among the nihilists, should not be harmed in any way whatsoever. Count Melikoff adhered to the pledge, and it enabled him still further to penetrate into the secrets of other persons. The question was how further to employ these persons, who belonged to the in telligent but indigent class of persons so numerous throughout Russia, in er der to render them harmless. One aftei the other the persons were secretly in vited to enter into arrangements in good Russian fashion. No one had a know ledge of the others’ doings or where abouts. By far the larger number ol liersons were sent out of the country in secrecy, as political agents to Roumetia, Servia, Greece ana Constantinople; while others were retained on stipends until an opportunity for employment should offer. They may be seen mov ing about freely. In conversation with others they profess to favor Panslatf a to the last; but they assert inessential for Russia to solve the problem of fonu ing a union among the Slavs; that being accomplished, the great measure of re form may be attempted. A Frencu Heroine. 'Pall MallGuette. .... . n . One of the celebrities of the rant markets is a woman who keeps a vege table stall, and who wears the red rib bon of the legion of honor. This wo man, Annettee Drevon by name, wat formerly continiere to the thirty-second regiment of infantry and to the second regiment of Zouaves, which she accom panied through the campaigns of Africa and Italy, and during the war with Germany. Of the seven or eight fe male members of the legion of honor, she is the only one who received the distinction for an act of valor upon the field of battle; and she was decorated, after the battle of Magenta, for rescu ing the regimental colors from two Aus trian soldiers who had captured them. During the war with Germany she wae with the thirty-second regiment ih Metz, and upon the surrender of that fortress she was sent off to Germany with the survivors. Just outside of Metz a Bavarian soldier insulted her, and she pulled out her revolver and shot him through the heart. For thh she was condemned to death, and would have been shot but for the inter vention of Prince Frederick Charles, who, hearing that a woman was to b< executed, made inquiries into the case, the result being that Annettee Drevoi was set at liberty. She lived in great poverty for some time, but Marsha: MacMahon happening to hear aboul her, gave her a ndkfNt sum at monej to set up the stall at which she now •ells carrqte, turnips and other aids a digestion. -«MHi Th* AmerfesM aw a very .jo*. lathe auwr thoaeai the i—tiyfor thdr h**l*k»» k)*i without it - - ''■>«; The Individual who 618*3 tight boots comfortable, defended his position by saying that they made a man forget all his other troubles. mrjjnunwft. When a man hooks a lot of fish he will brag about it for three days, but when he hooks a lot of apples he hasn’t a word to say about it. When a man and woman, are made one, the question “which one?" is a bothersome one until it is settled, as it soon is. “How many deaths?” asked the hos pital physician, while going his rounds. ; “Nine." “Why, I orderedmedicine for 'ton.” “Yes, but one wouldn’t take it” “Why didn’t you send for me soon er?” asked a Galveston doctor of a pa tient, who was very sick. “Well, you see, doctor, I could not make up my mind to take such a desperate step.” ’ There is a practical good sense in the old proverb, “Make hay while the sun * shines.” One could not very well go out at night, while the sun doesn’t shine, and make hay by the light of a lantern. A lady who never spanked her boy hard enough to hurt him, recently hung in her sitting room the illuminated mot to: “Whatsoever thy hand findcth to do, do it with thy might.” That boy , reformed on the soot. “I wonder,” said a young lady, “ why Hymen is always represented as carry ing a torch;” to which her bachelor un . cle snarlingly responded: “To indicate tiiat he always makes it warm for peo ' pie who marry.” ■, _ - A Scotch boy interrrigated his mother as follows: “Mrther, wull we hae tea for breakfast the mom?” “Ay, laddie, if we’re spared.” “An’ if we’re no spared, miteer, wull we only hae par ritch, as usual?" In Connecticut the method of com mitting suicide by going to bed with a pipe or cigar in the mouth, is becoming very popular. In many localities it is taking the place of kerosene. It isn’t so greasy, and don’t smell so bad; and ana then a man can be asleep during at least half the dying. Try it, and put a stop to the gigantic monopoly, kero sene. A correspondent asks: “Is butter re ferred to anywhere in the bible?” Cer tainly. When “Abraham lifted up bis eyes and looked, and beheld a ram caught in the thicket by his horns.” If our correspondent will read the twenty second chapter of Genesis he will find the old patriarch drew his knife across the butter and offered him as a sacrifice. —Ex. Our devil wants to know wheth er or not this was the first time hair was found on butter. He says it is an old custom closely adhered to where he boards. The dramatic editor of a French pa per had occasion recently to criticise se verely the performance of a somewhat popular actress. Shortly afterward the lover of the young lady met the jour nalist in the theatre, and presented him with a package of goose quills. “This, sir,” said he, “is a present from Miss X.” “What!” exclaimed the critic, “did she tear all these out of yourself? How you must have suffered !” The Athens, Georgia, Banner says: “For many years Moses, a negro, was a servant of the university of Alabama, and waited on the students very faith fully; but he was a most notorious hy pocrite. lie was commonly called “Preach” among the boys. One day be was passing a crowd of students, when one of them called to him: ‘I say, Preach, what are you going to do when Satan gets you?’ ‘Wait on students,1 was the reply.” - A lltele urchtn of two and a half years old was visiting at a friend’s house, where he sometimes got a halfpenny to spend on sweets, ana attracted the at tention of tbe inmates by putting the simple question, “What’ll I buy?” One of the family dsked where he in tended to make his purchase, when he gave the name of a grocer next door. Then, thinking to bring him to the point at once, she asked where the half penny was, and received the suggestive answer, “I liaena gotten’t, yet.” The hint had its effect. Uses for Flax Straw. It is hoped that the time will soon come when there will be a market for flax fiber in this country. At present flax is grown, except in a few localities where there are flax-mills, entirely for the seed. The straw is generally thrown away, and is sometimes burned. This straw may be employed for a num ber of very useful purposes. In the south farmers have a little apparatus which they set up in a yard or field, by Beans of which they make very good ropes out of cotton, hemp and flax. Ropes made of flax straw are useful for securing young trees to stakes, for at taching vines to posts or trellises, or far tying about shocks of corn. Flax straw may also be used to excellent ad vantage for putting about trunks of trees in order to protect them from the boat of the sun. Twisted somewhat loosely, and wrapped about rose bushes and tender shrubbery, it affords excel lent protection. Flax straw makes excellent packing for ice. But a comparatively small amount of it is required. It is clean, easy to handle, and not as liable to mold or rot as the substances that are usually employed. A piece of ice taken from the house and wrapped in flax straw may be carried a long distance with but very little waste. Many farm ers do not put up ice because it is diffi cult for them to obtain saw dust or tan bark for packing. Flax straw makes good bedding for Ml kinds of stock, _and^ it is especially good for bugs. It is 'excellent material tor mulching, and there are few things superior to it for mulching strawberry vines. It forms a close sort of matting, on which tbe ber ries can ripen without being spattered with mud. Most kinds of stock will eat flax straw after they have become accustomed to use it by having small quantities fed at a time. The Woman Who Campaigns* The woman whom the people call “the campaigner1’ has changed somewhat in her methods, according to her opportu nities, since old Tom Newcome’s time. She frequently goes abroad now, and may be seen leading a line of men, and able to hold her own with them, in any public resort. She is masculine, ty rannical, and even abusive and brutal, making her way where a lady would not care to make herself conspicuous, and yet, like a true coward, claiming in an extremity the homage due to her skirts. She is utterly unreasonable, demands a seat before one has a chance of offering her one, prods luckless boys with her stout umbrella if they happen to be in her way, requires as much room as a menagerie, and is followed by a pale, scared and meek husband who evidently never spoke above a whisper in his life. Women she ignores; men she fights. Ticket sellers know her for a virago, and woe to the waiter who happens to bring her a dish which she can contrast with some other dish on an adjoining table. Her husband, unfortunately for him, does not die, but seems forbidden to do so, as one of them recently said, “under penal ty of death.” Her favorite weather is rainy and cold out of doors. Her favor ite weather indoors, according to her husband, is rather hot • a . il. mtmmirnm to cressl to'Si Jn©OTo^de»r glam. A hollow gkss cylinder, suoh as the chimney of a lamp, is preferable to a flat sheet, as affording greater facilities for close inspection and more ready handling. Haring placed the slug or snail inside the tube, wait till it has got hold with its sucker like foot, and then turn the glass around so as to bring the under side into view. So long as roe animal remains at rest there is nothing in particular to attract one's attention; but the moment the creature begins to move a. wonderful change takes place. The first impres sion is that there must be a hollow channel along the center of the foot, through whiah a foaming torrent is rushing pell-mell from the tail toward the head. Such, it is scarcely necessa ry to add, is not the case, and the tor rential appearance is solely an optical illusion, due to the successive action of the surface of the muscular foot in pro pelling the animal forward. To under stand the nature of this movement clearly, take the ease of the caterpillar when crawling; hirst, the hinder por tion of the body is drawn up, forming an arch; then the feet in the front of the arch are successively raised and those behind set down, causing the arch to move forward toward the head, though the parfcs of the body maintain the same relative position. By the time the first loop or “wave,” in the caterpillar's body has readied its head, whiah it M ones stretches forward, another “ware” has commenced at the tail; and so am. Now, the motion In a snail's foot h t the same, only the “waves'’-do not af fect the whole body, as they do in the caterpillar, and mej fallow each other quickly as to give rise to the appear^ and of flowing “quid. The margins of the foot do not participate in this mo tion, but have a gentle, lateral, undu lating movement of their own. This motion of the muscular fibres of the foot is under the control of the anirnsi so far as starting and stopping are con cerned; but the actual motion itself ap pears to be automatic, and comparable to that of a locomotive engine where the driver turns the steam on or off, leaving the actual work to the mechan ism itself. Christian Common Souse. Golden Rule. /* There is a lack of ordinary business shrewdness on the part of some. Chris tian men and some Christian institu tions, which is simply amazing. It ex hibits itself in loose management and want of provision—in letting things drift, and trusting in luck baptized with the name of providence; ami though by a wretched caricature of faith this is miscalled “a life of trust,” it is nothing but a religious Micawberisra that folds its hands and expects something to “turnup.” “God helps those who help themselves.” There is no warrant in scripture or history for disregard of the ordinary laws of security and success. At the gathering of one of the great benevolent societies a few years ago the exceedingly sensible proposition was made to effect life insurances in the case of its missionaries. The suggestion was vehemently opposed by one of the “fathers in grace,” who argued that “those who are doing the Lord’s work ought to trust the future of their fami lies to. the Lord’s care,” and not be guilty of such an impious forestalling of divine providence as an actual busi ness arrangement for their possible wants. Shame to say it, but the good brother’s ill-logic prevailed and the proposition was lost; but he himself soon after died, leaving his family with out a dollar, dependent upon the chari ty of the world for the barest necessities of food mod clothing. ■emarkabb Ractem. The sciences of medicine and chemls-1 try have never produced so valuable a remedy for the treatment of Kidney dis eases, as the accidental discovery of the vegetable contained in 1>ay’s Kidsct Pad. Its reliable character, desirable qualities and masterly curative power have deeply won upon the confidence of the medical profession and countless sufferers who have used it. Curious But Not Inexplicable. Dublin [Ga. 1 Gazette. The other morning a young man in this place awoke from a refreshing night’s slumber both deaf and dumb, nor has he spoken a word since or heard at all. The night before when he re tired he could talk and hear as well as he ever could. He remembered no un pleasant feeling during the night, nor is he affected in any other way. We sym- ; pathize with the young man, who is very intelligent and a general favorite with every one. He is about twenty one or twenty-two years old. THE tiREiTENT IX THE WORIsD. Without a questiou Buffalo, N. Y., can boast of the largest and most complete private San itarium in the world. The Invalid’s Hotel was founded by Dr. R. V. Pierce, who has repre sented his district as State Senator and in Congress, and is known throughout the United States as the originator of Dr. Pierce’s Family Medicines, and who has also become widely celebriteuin the treatment of chronic diseases. The erection of this mammoth home for inval ids was made necessary by the large number of afflicted wh > flocked to Buffalo from all parts of the United States to consult Dr. Fierce ami the eminent medical gentlemen associated with him as the faculty of this celebrated in stitution. The establishment is said to have cost nearly half a million of dollars, and is fur nished with every appliance and facility for the care of chronic ailments. A correspondingly large branch institution is located in London, England. The whole concern is owned and operated bytlu World’s Dispensary Medical Association, of which the original Dr. Pierce is President—his brother, an uncle, and other eminent medical gentlemen, taking part In the treatment'of casea. In treating cases they are not at all confined to the narrow limits of pre scribing the justly celebrated remedies, Dr. Fierce’s Golden Medical Discovery, Pleasant Purgative Pellets, or any other set remedies^ hoWcvef good, but hare resort to the whole range of the Materia Mediea, as well as to Turkish and other baths, Swedish move ments and other approved remedies and meth | ods of cure. __ The manner of newspaper reporting in a provincial village: “An accident, which might have resulted fatally, hap pened yesterday .to Madame la Mar quise de Bonbeck, aged eighty years. Editor-in-chief making corrections: We must put her down forty-five or she will stop her subscription.11 The Reason Why. • The tonic effect of Kidney-Wort is produced ! bv its cleansing and purifying action on the blood. Where there is a gravelly deposit in the urine, or milky, ropy urine from disorder ed kidneys, it cures without tail.-Jndepend Justice inuaru, OI me supreme euuii. of North Carolina mav serve as an ex ample of personal independence. It is related that Judge Kerr once saw Dil lard in a second class car. “Hi!” said Kerr; “how comes it that a man of your cloth is caught in a second class car?” “Because there is no third class,” quietly replied Judge Dillard, and asked for a match to light his pipe. FEAKOlf * COM2, Wholesale Fruit*, Produce and Fresh Oysters CoouBiiMloB Merchant*. Omaha. Sept. 2i, 1880. We quote to-day: Butter -Choice, scarce, 15@90q; medium 10, @13c Eggs—20@22 per dozen. Apples—per barrel, 12.25. Peaches, Grapes, Peart, Plums. California Fruits, and Fresh Oysters at lowest market prices. 10 LBS. OF STANDARD A SUGAR FOB 01.00, And all other groceries proportionately low. Send for complete price list, and J save 25 per cent, on grocery bill*. | Country orders solicited. J. B. French A Co., The .Reliable Grocers, Omaha. Neb.. Mention asms of paper yon taw this In. ; 1 M: ■ _,ch BRtan ion hum tbs malarial neats, U smmsD* sod tbs nslstsut af tSs Tmttfrfl— art to shrrtiar ssof3ie*ft*r,stsnm* and bow el,., which Increase tbs danger to be appre hended tram miasma. Moreover, it eradicates malarial complaints el an obstinate type. The field in which this leading family meat cine has achieved some of its most astonish ing and amply proven effects is a very wide one. In the matarlcas regions of oar own country, In South Anferlca.Mexlco, and sctobs the seas, i t has given unmistakable evidences of lts curative vi|ue. At liome and abroad It has always sustained Its high reputation, ni has it ever been affected by competition of f called tonics, represented to possess kin" or equal efficacy. It stands aloue, unequ among our national remedies. A wag circulated a report that fi cer tain rich old deacon had been “riinning rapidly through hisproperty.” The dea con called onhim to “retract the slan der,” when the wag aaid hiv saw him “running through pis property’.’ with his brinale bull after him. E. R. Dawley, of Providence, R. I., says: “Having witnessed the wonderful effects of Hunt's Remeuv in my own esse, and in a great number of dPMntjTcajnuuend it to all afflicted with Kidnjj Muses. Those sfflletel with disease should sesurr the medietas which w ill cure in shortest possible time. Hunts Remedy-will do this.’1 _ Have MeMylfatvs Msasyl Send small (rial nwHnsw to W< ■lualimun, Osultaa, Sehiisha. for good heavy/y brown muslin 6}{e per yard, wesy ■'•htist---wt. tie. Quod prints 5c. Best bleached niusliii 9c. All wyol flannels 35 to ^SUc. -iioo^-dmwa foods from ttXcparyM&r sad upwards. 'Anyone favor ing m with a trial order nod at* entirely ait i Isfied wfth&e goods eattfiwtar* them at «ur expense, fM the money vfili M returned, pr if the shove does eot me# with yen* a hmd & two*: ftnry Pundt, Omaha, Nob.,, grocer ami wine merchant, ualls your attention: to his tine stock of groceries, complete in every sonse of the word, and as low as the lowest for the same quality. Good goods at bottom prices fur nosh, is the motto. Send for price-list. Have you secured your stove for the coming winter? 1). A. Piercy, 1211 Famham street, Omaha, has on ham! a full stock of them—including the Ast ral, Westminster anil the {Jew Heela. book ovei^he^tDcl^whei^^in^^isi^Hii^tm cures when: all other medicines kail, as it ads directly on the Kidney*, Liver, and Bowel*, restoring Hu m at once to heulthy action. HUNT'S REMEDY Isasafv', sure ami spooily cure, and hundreds have testified to having lict'ii cured tty it ■when physicians and friends hud given them nn to die. Do not delay, try at once HUNT'S REMEDY. Send for pamphlct4t* WM. K. CLARKE, Provldance, 1W I. Priceaw75 cent* and ®t.‘4.T. Large size the cheapest. Ask your druggist tor HUNT’S ltKAl EDV. Take no oilier PERMANENTLY CURES [ KIDNEY DISEASES, LIVER COMPLAINTS, I I Constipation and Piles. Dr. R. H. Clark, Souti Hero, Vtksaya, "Incase* I of TronhlM it hag acted like a charm. It I has cured many yer^ba*! cases of Ml*, and has I aw*1 . o. fHogaboM,«rfl aye has done w—As~ I lag a severe IAwrai it has unri/Q WONDERPUL || II I I POWER., AflU BocMMltActioattaliVtl, th« WWIM»si the SIDNEYS At the use Urns. Because It cleanses the system of I I tho poisonous humors that develope | In Kidney and Urinary diseases, Bil iousness. Jaundice, Constipation, Piles, or In Rhocmatlsm, Neuralgia [ and nervous dissrders. KIDNEY-WORT la • Ary TccetaWs paudsad eaa be seat by mall prepaid. One package will makes!* qta of medicine. THY IT NOW S Buy li at tbe DracgliU Price, $1.00. WILLS, EICEA2D30H ft CO., Proprietor!, |2 (Will M>nd poit paid.) llnrllngtoa, Vt. Hill Mannfaetorji Kstabilafced 1H51, CRIST MILLS, OeFKKNClI BUHH BTONH Portable Mill* for Farmer*, Saw Mill* ete.; 16 aixca; over S,000 in n «. Price from H ap. Complete Hill and Sfcclb «r, |95. A boj can (rind an* seep Inorder. Adapted to anjn kina of euilable power. Corn plcte Flouring ami Corn Mill*. NORDVKE ft MARMOR CO., iBdiauanolia. lad j JOHN B. DETWILER, Carpets, uil Cloths VlKIM)W PHAOE8, KT<\ OMAHA. - .... KKIIKA3K A. Orders l»y mall will liav<» prompt and ew tWiii Miifniimi | ■ lice BOYS' LIv». dflOnps. Illustrated. l*rtc« vJMICw ei.no. proHpeei«u» Sue. HU pay. One innt sold MO. Address 4.W. MARSH. Si.. Louis. Mo. Agents, Peddlers, Street Salesmen WTlte usat once for our new and complete Price List of imkIs for tills Fall's frrsde. Campnlim Clinrts.EnKrav Flips and Badges. e’ry. Stationary, Notions,.-tc hot loin prices KeniJiC'*" Novn|i"ro.. C. N ui.hI.J Ag’ts of Hew Campaign Charts and Kdk'ks W8llI0O«Vanlli rVaart ;*Co.. put*. "r~ ~ W, N, IJ», Omaha, When writing: to! saw the advertf Ka. City. Mo IT IJveitlsers please say yo» metit In Shis paper. KAUTS DIRECTLY Or Bladder, Bowel* A. Urln By forcing Into the system ttirmiBU lh* oawaWw* skin, powerful and healthful vetgcltliB tonW urt'tlci, and abanrbln* from II «ri* humon M every trace of disease, Ktvlae It wamlaiM RwwdK-V: co Immediately relieve and perniawifty; nnffSHftjjf Aiinmatloa and Brlal»l,»,lB',sda#flM ncyo, Bluhete*. »roi»y, KhwiawiB—, mipatloa af the Bewela, MMM*K 9f B ladder, Inability to retaha dr npd Vrise, fttoar la the Bladder, fteanty or Pnlaftil Crla»ll#^v?mi“*—^ w the Brine, PAIM IK THE ijMb Boln*, Merroa* BeWHty, .gdgBjh no**, and In fact all diseases of ^TSJsSSi^MS whether contracted hy over work, jwysslyo «Wat, the abuse of nature or otherwise. ft tjrely the Ineonvenjencca und M"uMesor torTM naa aeons and hurttui jaUrual iucdh'iqg. U |* dlasblverof the MsoamatM* Afjj whhih.Tmyam the Kidneys and exists ftj the tdwiirdf Khegaatlo fcwu. It Hi worn exactly where aP*di «U nr*i to thWU. in,ww«'»j»*» —. body and over the kldwv*. H can he * -* -“ “ cuaally awal for - ‘ ‘ wont ami «bat U Is no deception, but (Treat valoc, effeeitojc all IIm* hna, mvUht handred* of dotlam, i •offerer aounnd body and iwrftwt mror aounnd body and pr .dally addin* their uatim__ ersof tnlaKreat remedy, wltohuT© health after all other treatmen to i fulled. Why Tormented with haem yliurdruin'lst Tor It, and accept no Imllatfe lute. If he has not got it, semi to us and ; return mail, , UKKOKifTivB Prior List, - liettulur Special Pad for Clnoofe. dWp-floated, < itoome con vmm i ted appliance of iiM'd ami nothlaa Laaeurlngtodiwgc ,'Kn* hi i n f B f if ii.ic 1.191. • w^innr I Special Pad for Clu^Mla, dedp-seated, or eel xiiutdiag, Kfi CWBrea’s Pad, for acini aWSTwakTldaey* and M wetting. J book, “How aUJbwfa Baved," eontnialnfl 000c, "rowsuiswh nsvdl." contnlnln af «Us maa lhyw. «**Mil fw« w MT HMKY m Mh mao, „ NOW READY. * l«»«ed Auiruat 1»t. 1 AMERICAN NEWSPAPER DHECtOlY FOB IMHO. V ' Twelfth Animal Volume.—1,00# Pages. Price Five ItoUauY. t TIiIh work In tlu* recognized maim) of Information on l lie 81 a) iNtlcs (»f American Neimmpnr* Advertla cra, Advert(slug Agon's, Editors, Pullltdtins anil the Department* of the Govt rnnmiit rcry upon 11* si* le nient* as the only nvo nlzed niuhorlty. It give* ihe Name* of nil Newspu|K‘r* and nine lodlea!*: the PoIUIch, Religion, Cla*» or Chari ties; the Day a of l sail e; the Editor’* Name; Ol IlHher’H name; 8Izo of Paper; Subscription PrUaJf of Establishment, and I lie hc*l obtainable iiifotfir nlMiut tin* elrculatluii, and Heverul valuable lair— claHRifle.ailmiR. 81** Revised annually, and Information down to t In* laPut dale. Sent to any nddren» ogg of price. Addrc. GEO. P. ROWELL & CO., .ftfaunw (Newspaper Advertising ltureiut,) ( 10 N|>rttC« M4.« r|/T» PROFESSOR IIKRMAN’A WOULD KUNOWNEI} Vermin Destroyer. Till* Powder klllR Rats, Mice, Cockroach*1*, black Beetle*. Bugs, Ants. Elen* on png*. Blight add In* stetson PlantR, Moths in Kura, Insects on Ponltrv, sccison PlantR, Moths in Mira, Insects on Pontirv, also on Osirlcli, Potato UngR, and White Ants, Tick and Scab on Sheep, Goat*, and Cattle. .DIRECTIONS FOI! ITSK.—For Tick and Bgah on Sheep or Goat*. t«it one Packet of Powder In a TMcfcat of water, wliteh will he sntHclrnt for III Klieem fmch the hotly well, andHeethal (lie head of the unload U kept out of the preparation. For Vermin In lioksni. spread a Hinall portion of the dry Powder where foil think there Is Vermin; they will 1« aure to cut 41* Md expire almost Immediately. , Price, 35cta. per Packet, or six Packets for ft. V. . — ’ * . tn4tM rrice, joeia. jier rut ko, urn* iwi> Manufactory: Gravel Lane, llounUedlk-h, ci. f. noonMAx: Wholesale DriiKitl«t, Ojna.hu, W*Wa*M ItlniiiitnrtiirerM* Agent for the We»tfn State* timl Terrltoi-lea. ADD RETAIL. PAPER. WINDOW SHADES. METALLIC CENTER PIECES. STORE riJKTAINS-with or without plain and artlMtlc lettering a specialty. Chicago Prices Dnplicated. Samples of Wall Papt ra teat on application. I , •/ • HK1WRV LKHMAJWif, WlaAaw «-—* OMAHA. EBB. , Is THK CIIAMI IUN. 1 llty ansii w iih; ;**-*«. Lcatlirr and Slwl. Also make Ii;|3f *• >»«■ «nrf IMn* that an- the bona. All arc warrants ctr.- Mtlafnr. I bin. Sfnil for circular or Biunitlt*. : »**•*rf*®te any Unit. Sold by all ilvahTB. Ad. Ell - .JNuOLOVIl FAOTOHV. b« W St-rond at.. I*a\frn -t, tom*. Gt. Toeepla., Is oowluclfl tiyttucx|K*rfc jIUT-anitunl and BiHM-caafnl toucher. Inal null i«*n ttumwjrn and |inw.ticnl. Tuitionlower I bm-«h**wl»«n»t Full particulars to any uddivaf THOS. J. PT^ViT. Pm. CGILBERTS STARCH STANDS TO DAY WITHOUT A JIYAL IN THE WORLD. For the cuae of aJl km* of Arm# andCMNt it hu .pOflqiwitJierWifcyteifl * It never Wilt to aw nol the disease, thcrubp uxitiug a. permanent cure. the tool of wnlpij—I hm for thirty yeaw iu ihn most tnalAruki districts • merely removing for a tlike the symptoms, but eradicating the cause of PRICE ONLY 75 CENTS ■MefMlarwl W TA« Dr. Nerter Jfedlelne Co., Wo. S13 H. Main Street, Ms. Loom Rev. F. Hackbmk?be, Aiipt German Protestant Orphans' Home. 8t Charles Rock Rond, Pt. T.otn* Co7 writing April 30th, *877. says: - *‘7>r. Harter*g Fe\*r and Ague Specific is a positive cure foi Chills aud Fever; has never Ailed with us." Mr. Jno.C. Wer.BORN«»f Keysport 111., says: “I cured a little girl of Aeue of three joarf standing, with Dr. Harter's Fever and Ague Specific, after the best physicians failed to btmuL her • Dr. YorjroBfrioo of Tittle York. Mo.. Bars: "1 have used Dr. Harter*» Fever and Ague Specific m inv Tuaeti''** end can h»»srWv reennimeod it fr> iln- public" KID1TEY DISEASES, CONSTIPATION n AND PILES. are quickly and surely eofad by the use of KXDNKY-WORT. Till* nev and wonderful remedy which ■ having such an Imnwnw Ml* in all part* of the country, works on natural principles, I* restores strength and bone to the diseased Mfua, and through them cleanses the system of accumulated and poisonous humors. Kidney die—eesef thirty years standing have been cured, also Piles, Constipation, Rhemnsaa*, Sco.. which hare distressed the *Mma for years. We have volume* of teeti raony of its wonderfu rurwve power. No longer—eileholta Bitters, which do more harm than good, or drastic pills, but US' “’ wo *y, KUJNET-WOBT, sod health will be quickly regained. Cet It of your Drugglet, ■». iFill pead poet paid) WEL^J*, MIC1IARPHON A i'O., Prep’s. Barlierf a,_Yf Thin ponder mikn “Gllt-Eiltre” Butter the in* t°«"'I- «*• M»wt ami the Science of OirniMry *° B*t,c" mnltlnc. July, Au*»t ami Winter Bull.r »ml. «inl lath. bout Jane product. lucrrattw product • per wat. Imyrawt onality at least 20 per cent. ‘* 'tan,l^,r; half. ,Pr. ». ntK Batter becoming ralKil1- *m|,ro'“ ealnc 2 to •» rents a pound, Guaranteed free *n«all inirreilien's Given a nice Gol.len Color the year round. » eenOt worth will produce «U» I. .ncrea^of prodnedw* tVn“o“‘iroX" •m’TwiU.'Sr mark of diiirv-maltf, together with nle “GfGT-»«. Butter MAKER" printed on eael. package. *•'*«*** by Grocer, an I General Storr-keepera. A.k your dealer foe SrMHIHf to*uUur-M.k«Vyr .end •“mP * «hr |t, Boodle Tjfe..at «T ooBi*Larg0 W«.**»W, *J.Wt Great*. '* ttm.larpor.ixe. AiMnn*, ... itn laWOHaWW. IPadbau** Mo b. < ****** ®>-®. . * A. l- . .1