The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, June 18, 1896, Image 6

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    DONE BY DEMOCRACY^
.BUM AND DESOLATION ALL
». f OVER THE LAND.
* ' J ‘ ' . . . - •*
. V V' , . »- -
, Cnfruinu tiroufnnr of Ohio Arraign*
the AdmluUtratloa for lt« Aliu» of
; Poe*r Daring the I.stt Three Teen
—Roshlnc Lite Debt.
. ! ; -
Vs
AJ^you /the democratic party) have
goBp <jn*Vith the treasury bankrupt.
You haw? borrowed $262,000,000 upon
the bonds of thd government. You are
attempting to put yourselves in con
trast with a republican administration
that paid $250,000,000 of the national
debt in four years, that left the treas
ury solvent and plethoric. You stand
here to-day confessedly borrowing
$262,000,000 and trembling as each tele
graphic report comes from the markets
in New York lest that money you have
borrowed under the pretense of uphold
ing the redemption fund shall be again
drifting, under democratic administra
tion, acrosft the water into the banks of
London, Germany and France. And
you stand up here and attempt to criti
cise the administration of the republi
can party.—Hon. Charles H. Grosvenor,
M. C., Of Ohio. .
-j : Great Opportunity Lout,
■'} -The- last Congress might have used
free wool as a mighty lever to open the
markets of the wool-growing countries
to the agricultural and manufactured
products of the United States. On the
this city. I, or course, have no authority
to speak for hltp. I have had no com
munication with him for twelvemonths.
If business men of this city will possess
their souls in patience for a little more
than thirty days, ail their doubts will
vanish at the deliverance that I believe
will be made by the Republican Nation
al Convention, and then they may ex
pect a letter from McKinley. He ought
not to write one until that time.—Cor
nelius N. Bliss, in the New York Herald,
May 13,1896.
The "Sound Money'' Scheme.
The annual interest charge of 9144,
000,000 on the National debt was re
duced to $23,000,000 and the Interest
bearing debt was reduced from $3,000,
000,000 to about $600,000,000. This was
done by the Republican party.
In three years Grover Cleveland has
created a debt of $526,000,000, the an
nual interest charge being over $10,000,
000. He is eager to add $15,000,000 more
of interest annually by issuing Ove hun
dred millions of 3 per cent, bonds to
cancel the greenbacks and, incidentally,
make a gift of the piower to coin money
to the National banks.
Such is his fatuous “sound-money”
humbug in a nutshell.—N. Y. Press,
May 1,1896.
8«n»tor Mantle Ltoka Wen.
The recent enormous advance made
in the industrial development of Japan,
and which is now spreading to China,
has demonstrated to reflecting men
who have given the subject thoughtful
consideration, that a protective tariff
will no longer alone successfully guard
our manufacturers and wage earners
from the stream of cheap manufactured
products which has begun to flow from
those countries to our shores, and
which is at last exciting the serious
alarm of great numbers of our citizens
engaged in the manufacturing indus
tries. This is evidenced by the fact
that boards of trade, chambers of com
merce, and other organizations are ap
pointing committees to Investigate the
nature, character and extent of this
Asiatic industrial invasion.—Hon. Lee
Mantle, United States senator, of Mon
tana.
Mi
HOW THE "TONIC” HAS ACTED.
ilivehnwns Qbtalnatlbn "WnHtSt Sail'
toaji| on|the TOhSocraHcTilrtyi it will
MM It *p and niak^’lt the attractive^
paHy for you^'g'rrieh'of tntelllgenceand
P^Bciple to ally themselves With.Mtf.
H6ward Gilder in the N. Y.|Tia&, fimw
21*4.192. ' *"H"
ifi|e Democratic party has "braced
Up" '’wonderfulfy^ TSe ifeipocratlc pa
pers tell us howWeildenttnl candidates
are fighting each other, for the honor of
representing It. The dtjlOtey is quite
i sklttis^, and the old Dame Is such an
.“attraptlfe paHy for young men of in
''tejjlg^ce and principle to ally them
selves with.” They look as If the
"tonic” had soured on >tt)qir stomachs.
Irary, the Democratic party not only
^ehled the reciprocity laws but it con
ferred upon the wool-growing countries
the benefit? of free access to the mar
khttofthi* country for their wool.wlth
ontlfxa'cfing a reciprocal benefit of any
kind in return. Free wool was a free
glff to the foreigners, without gaining
frdn then: the benefit of an additional
market1 among them for ,a single pound
of American pork or a bushel of Amer
tcaicwheat.
The next President must be a Demo
tt The worse th&hiirarMaxep'' th&t
down.—N. Y. World, June 2f. 1892.
: msaafi «Mm cmibmhih.
’ • Mr. McKinley's nomination seems to
'■‘he practically sesured, said. Cornelius N.
iBttes, and it is in the highest degree iro
ue, as well as discourteous, for Re
have been made upon him, especially in
ifjvyv
&•
, Mora Chinese Wool.
It is safe to say that whatever ex
tension of the woolen industry has oc
curred in this country in the l&st year
has been in the view of developing the
use of fine wools in the place of Turkish,
Russian and Chinese wools.—New York
Evening Post.
We have not -the figures of the im
ports of Turkish or Russian wools for
1895. but those relating to Chinese wools
shoiv that we imported 10,633,599pounds
in 1891, and iS.889.95t pounds in 1892.
Rut Under Free Trade in wool, our 1895
imports amounted to 089,418 pounds
of Chiheee wool, more than dbiible the
average of the two McKinley Tariff
yeare. God kip's abllltjr as a Free-Trade
liar 'must' be deserting him -when he
tells such a commonplace llo as that.
Wh*» "If War !«•»». J
It (the Democratic party) has become
in a true sense the party of the people,
the exponent of equal rights and It has
planted itself upon a principle which is
impregnable.—Edward Atkinson at
Boston, dune 28, 189$. ^ i
About air “lmpre«igbie” as the posi
tion of a Spanish general before the
Cuban republicans. “It" is about
“planted” in its grave. i
i 1 •’#t i ' ;
Carter far Fair Flay,
M We do not credit the rumors that any
unfairness will be practiced in seating
delegates to the St Louis oonventton.
«on. Thpmae H,: Carter, United States
Senator, who'is chairman Of the Repub
lican Rational Committee, would not be
W party toaSysuch schemes.
Dan or ratio Trade Mtaatlea. ■
The general trade situation
throughout the country may be re
garded as less satisfactory at the mid
dle of March, 1896, than had been an
ticipated. Even prices of staples have
refused, to make and maintain ad
vances.—Bradst.reet’s.
DAIRY AND POULTRY
INTERESTING CHAPTERS FOR
OUR RURAL READERS.
Row Successful Farmers Operate ThU
Department of the Farm—A Few
Hints as to the Care of Lire Stock and
Fouitrj.
HAVE BEEN En
gaged in raising
poultry ever since
the spring of 1890.
I then purchased an
incubator, and from
that time I have
given my entire at
tention to poultry
raising. I started
in perfectly ignor
ant of the buisness,
and at the bottom of the ladder.
Through many experiments and losses,
successes and failures, 1 am gradually
rising to the top. During the first three
years my main object was to find out
what breed would give me the largest
profit per fowl. In this test I had twen
ty-one different breeds, giving them the
same care and attention, and keeping
a strict book account of each breed.
The breeds in this test were: Light
Brahma, Dark Brahma, Black Cochins,
White Cochins, Partridge Cochins, Buff
Cochins, American Dominique, Silver
Spangled Hamburgs, Houdans, Black
Javas, Black Langshans, Single Comb
Brown Leghorns, Single Comb White
Leghorns, Rose Comb Brown Leghorns,
Rose Comb White Leghorns, Black
Minorcas, Barred Plymouth Rocks.
White Plymouth Rocks, Red Caps, Sil
ver Laced Wyandottes, and White Wy
andottes. The balance sheet would In
variably fall in favor of the Single Comb
Brown Leghorns. This breed Is now
my choice, and I breed them exclusively
for three purposes: First, the selling
of thoroughbred eggs; then the raising
of early broilers, and last for eggs in
the winter. There is in my opinion
no other breed that excels them for
either of these three purposes. I have
at present a fine flock of birds. These
birds have free range during the sum
mer months, with convenient place for
roosting at night. They are housed
during the winter months in the main
building, which is 20x80 feet, two stories
high, containing eighteen pens 8x16
feet. In each pen are placed from fif
teen to twenty fowls, with no outdoor
runs. The feeding consists principally
of vegetables and grain, such as can be
raised during the summer, namely:
cabbages, turnips, sugar beets, potatoes,
apples, corn, wheat, rye, oats, buck
wheat and millet. I keep pounded oys
ter shells before them all the time for
grit and feed green ground bone three
times a week. I consider these essential
for the productiqn of eggs. The mar
keting is of very great importance, as
I do not give my time to the business
for the fun there is in it but for the
money alone. I market principally in
the city of New York. By feeding the
variety of food above mentioned and
grain fed in a litter of cut corn fodder
I keep the egg basket full of eggs and
the incubators full to their utmost
capacity of eggs laid by my own hens,
when the thermometer outside ranges
from 10 to 12 degrees below zero. Dur
ing the first few years of my experi
ence I had some difficulty with dis
eases, lice and predatory animals. But
after finding the secret of cleanliness
and of disinfectants and the value of a
good gunshot, I have often raised from
95 to 98 per cent of the chicks hatched.
In my earlier years I tried doctoring
fowls and found It simply time thrown
away, for if the same time were used
in cleaslng the coops and applying dis
infectants, diseases would rarely oc
cur. By careful breeding and always
selecting the best laying birds and
earliest matured pullets and cockerels.
I have at present remarkable egg pro
ducers and early maturers, the pullets'
often laying at four months old. If’ any
further knowledge of my experience is
desired it will be cheerfully given.
John Smoker.
Cow Faaria and Feeding.
(Condensed from Farmers’ Review
stenographic report of Wisconsin
Round-Up Institute.)
Thomas Convey spoke on feeds and
feeding. In substance he said: Most of
us by this time realize the necessity of
having the right kind of an animal to
feed. In feeding ourselves we use a
variety of food, and we do it by in
stinct. Our animals cannot select their
food for themselves as we can, but have
to depend on us for the variety of food
they do get
Some foods, like whole milk, are
nearly perfect stock food, for they con
tain all of the elements necessary to de
velop the animal. But in many of the
foods fed there is a deficiency of cer
tain elements. The balancing of the
elements of the food is necessary it we
are to get the best results. At one of
the experiment stations it took nearly
50 per cent more food to produce a cer
tain amount of gain when the food was
unbalanced than it did when the ele
ments were properly balanced.
An excess of concentrated food should
not be fed alone to any animal. Con
densed foods should be mixed with
bulky foods. Bulk is a necessity in the
food of the cud chewing animal.
The condition of the hay and fodder
affects the feeding value of those foods
to a very great extent. While the loss
of dry matter may be small on account
of the deterioration in quality, the loss
in digestibility and palatabllity is very
great
Q-—Will you give us a good balanced
ration for milk?
Mr. Convey.—For the grain ration
you can make up a variety of formulas
each of which will give good results. In
Wisconsin we can profitably feed
ground peas and oats and wheat bran,
com meal and com in the silage. The
ground peas and oats are mixed half
and halt, and that compound fed with
an equal amount of bran. We might
make one good formula aa follows:
Two and a half pounds of corn, two and
and a half pounds of the mixed peas
and oats, and five pounds of bran.
Q.—Will type of cow control the ra
tion to some extent?
A.—Well, if you have a cow that will
not profitably use this ration, that Is,
that will turn it into beef instead of
into milk, you had better fatten her
and send her to the butcher.
Q.—How often do you feed per day?
A.—We feed coarse feed three times
a day and ground feed twice a day.
The coarse feed is fed morning, noon
and night.
Mr. Burchard said he believed that
cows should be fed but twice a day, and
that there was no more reason for feed
ing them at noon than at midnight.
Langihans Plymouth Bock Croat.
About 25 years ago I began raising
poultry on a small scale and have been
at it ever since that time. For the last
ten years I have been paying more at*
tention to the business. I commenced
with Black Spanish, found them to be
good layers but poor table fowl. Then
1 took the Brown Leghorns and kept
them twenty years. I found them to
be good layers and good table fowls.
Then I tried the Black Langshan3 and
the Plymouth Rocks separately. Their
cross (Barred Plymouth Rock) I had
bad luck with. I shall keep the Lang
shans and the White Plymouth Rocks,
their cross being the nearest to what 1
want for marketing. Their cross suits
my customers as well as the white Ply
mouth Rocks, and they are much more
hardy. I have a comfortable place for
them In winter, though it is not on
the fancy order. I have separate
houses and yards for the breeds I wish
to breed from. I feed the chicks on
wheat bran, middlings and cornmeal,
equal parts with a little bone meal
mixed in with milk, soon to follow with
millet, wheat and cracked corn. The
laying hens are fed soft food in the
morning, wheat or oats at noon, and
wheat or corn at night. I have a very
fair market for both poultry and eggs,
most of mine going to private families.
In the winter I do not get many eggs
before February. One year I lost a
good many fowls by Borne disease,
though very few any year by lice. I
have lost none with lice since I kept
them well supplied with coal ashes.
Last year I lost twenty per cent from
hawks and skunks, more than I have
lost from the same causes in all other
years put togethe>. I have had good
success raising broods and have al
ways had a large per cent hatch. When
I see a fowl sick I at once separate
her from the rest and doctor, generally
successfully. Wm, M. Smith.
Cream Trade Increasing.
Bulletin 23 of Maine Experiment Sta
tion says: It is an important feature
of our dairy business that there is a
growing demand for fresh, sweet
cream, not only for domestic use. but
for exporting to the large cities. Dur
ing the past year this cream trade from
Maine has considerably exceeded $150,
000 and each year finds the demand in
creasing. It has come to be an impor
tant question how best to foster this
branch of our dairy business, and dur
ing that season when butter is most
abundant and cheapest—for there is
the greatest demand for cream during
the summer months—to find a profit
able market for this commodity and so
reduce the butter supply and at the
same time increase the profit from the
dairy. One important reason for foster
ing the cream trade is that cream sold
to be consumed as cream is in no large
degree a rival of either milk or butter,
but enlarges the demand for dairy
products at a time when such products
are most abundant and most cheaply
produced.
Inflammation of Udder in Ewe.—In
flammation of the ydder is even more
common in the ewe than in the cow
and that fact considering that the lat’
ter animal is used principally as a milk
ing machine, is testimony to its fre
quency. It is, perhaps, the more re
markable since the ewe is not in this
country an animal in which the secre
tion is artificially maintained beyond
its natural duration. The function of
lactation is essentially intermittent be
ing active only during the parturient
period, and ceasing when the lamb no
longer requires milk, except, of course
in those countries where ewe’s milk
cheese is a staple article of manufac
ture. There is another peculiar fea
ture in mammltis in the ewe as com
pared with the same disease in the
cow—viz., the frequency with which it
takes on the gangrenous form and ends
in Bloughing of the section of the gland
attacked and death of the animal._Ex.
High Priced Stock Abroad.—We are
just now in the midst of great depres
sions in beef cattle, draft and road
ster horses, and sheep breeding indus
tries, and since America is not now
Importing all these lines of stock from
the old world, it would be expected as
a result, that this class of stock would
be “flat” on the market there as well.
Not so. The reports through the stock
journals of the old world show that the
best specimens of the different lines of
stock command as high figures us when
we were importing millions of dollars
worth annually.—Ex.
Progress of the Plow.—The plow U
not a perfect implement, and a reward
of the entire globe might safely be of
fered for any work of art that is perfect
in all its relations. Now the plow, in
cluding the first picked stick that was
used for seeding operations, is the old
est Implement used in agriculture, and
in every advanced step of the industry
it has not only kept pace but has really
led in its march. Step by step in his
growth may be read the relative condi
tion of man from beyond the period of
the pyramids down to the latest elec
trical plow, which is still leading in ths
van of the world's onward march.—Ex.
KICKING TREES.
Lumbermen Mast Know Them and Knou
How to Keep from Heine Kicked.
Very few who have ever witnessed
the method of lumbering in the Maine
forests realize the danger, with its ac
companying fascination, the hard, rug
ged work with its health-giving results
or the enjoyments to be found in camp
life in the solitary woods, miles from
civilization.
The danger from flying limbs or a
"kicking” tree as It falls, lodges, oi
strikes upon a stump or across a log,
and swings around or flies back with
terrific force, is not noticed by the lum
bermen if they are lucky enough to
dodge successfully. Another danger
that people little realize is that of the
teamsters who haul the logs from the
stump to the main road. Much of the
timber is cut on the mountain sides,
which are so steep that a horse team
can scarcely climb up. At the top, logs
measuring from 30 to 50 feet In length
are loaded upon one sled and are
dragged down the mountain. In places
the road goes down so steep that the
ends of the logs are above the horses
hips. The logs with the sled tip down,
and away they go down the mountain
as fast as the horses can go, with the
teamster hanging to the reins and
keeping his balance upon the logs as
they thrash and roll around beneath his
feet. Occasionally the teamster emits
a terrific yell that would put a Coman
che Indian to shame, to warn his'
brother teamsters that he is coming,
so they can get out of the way. They
drive into a turnout, and the loaded
team spins past them. It 1b seldom
a horse loses his footing; if he does
the team is sluiced down the mountain.
Occasionally they go against a tree,
and sometimes both of the horses are
killed, but they generally come out all
right, with a few scratches.
OVER THE RAPIDS.
A Mighty Perilous Trip Made by a Boat
man at Xlaagra.
Niagara Falls special to a Chicago
paper: “There he goes," cried hun
dreds of people in one accord along the
bank of the upper river as Fred C.
Heine, a German boatman, shot out
into the river just above the American
rapids and falls to make the perilous
trip across the swiftly-running stream
to the head of Goat Island. The river
was full of ice, which threatened to
swamp the daring navigator. The bow
of the boat at one time ran into a large
cake and it took Heine some time to
break loose. He drifted dbwn rather
dangerously near the upper breakers
in the rapids and the thousands of
spectators who had assembled held
their breath expecting the man would
not be able to keep out of them. He
used his paddle very effectively and
shot his boat across and into the quiet
water above Goat Island. He did not
dare land, as the restoration police
warned him to keep oft the state prop
erty or they would arrest him. He
hoisted two American flags in the bow
and stern of the boat and made the trip
back very easily. This feat was a
common one with the Indians. How
ever, a mishap or accident means death.
Heine had a canoe-like boat, which was
very easily handled.
“Mnatard and CreM.'*
A charming young hostess, whose
residence is on 81st street, has started
a pleasant little fad that is growing
rapidly in favor among the younger
housekeepers of the uptown set. The
fad is nothing less than to have fresh
and crisp "mustard and cress” served
In purls naturallbus, as it grows, on the
breakfast table. Mustard and cress is
a favorite addition to the thin bread
and butter of English breakfasts and
teas, and the young hostess has hit up
on the design of growing it in her own
dining room. The process is simplicity
itself. A piece of clean white flannel
is placed in the bottom of a soup plate
and saturated with water. It is then
sprinkled with mustard seed and a
tablespoonful of water night and morn
ing does the rest. In three days the
seed sprouts; in a week the plate is a
mass of pretty green seed leaves. In
ten days it is a forest of crisp and suc
culent cress, which can be placed upon
the table and eaten just as it grows.
It seems to freshen up the breakfast
table wonderfully and, besides, it is “so
English, you know.”—New York Journ
al.
Warning from the Grava.
On an ancient gravestone In the
Georgetown, Md., cemetery Is found the
following admonitory epitaph:
Stop, traveler: one moment wait,
While I my solmen tale relate.
With strong ambition, youth and health
The world I followed, grasped at wealth.
Madly despised my Maker’s frown
And broke my constitution down.
At length incurable disease
Brought death to me by sure degrees.
My sins around me wound a chain
To drag me down to endless pain.
I cried for mercy, but I cried.
Perhaps, too late, for when I died
My friends had nothing left to prove
I ever felt a Savior’s love.
As then, with my expiring breath
So now from the cold house of death
I \rarn you, sinner, turn, beware,
Forsake your sins, or meet despair.
Tho Colonel's Definition.
“The horn of plenty?’’ repeated the
Colonel, pressing his hand to hia brow.
"That would be difficult to deOne for
any and all circumstances but I should
say that five Angers was a good, aver*
age Agure.”
With which he didn't care if he did.—
Detroit Tribune.
Darkness cannot be made black
onough to destroy light.
| New Inventions,
j Among1 the Inventors who received
patents last week were the following
Nebraskans: A. H. Edgren and 6.
Elmen, Lincoln, improvement in bicy
cles and B. F. Smith of Valparaiso,
| Nebraska, the latter receiving a patent
I for an improvement in car couplings.
Among the other noticeable inven
tions is a candle lamp patented to a
Boston inventor; a burglar proof safe
in the form of a revolving cylinder; an
improved method of making bicycle
tubing cloth, patented to a Cleveland,
Ohio, inventor; a, color screen to enable
photographs being taken in colors is
sued to a Brooklyn inventor; a kitchen
implement patented to A. Schlieder of
Sioux City. Iowa; a pinless clothes
line, the creation of a Texas inventor;
, a collapsible cooking utensil made in
[ the form of a telescope drinking cup,
patented to Miss Estelle J. Jennings of
Chicago; a combination neck and ear
warmer patented to Mary E. Wiggin of
Hartford Connecticut; a soft tread
horse-shoe invented by James Freyne
of Philadelphia; an elevator mechanism
comprising two parallel vertical tracks
having elevator cars which pass up
one track and are switched over and
pass downward on the other track,,
these combined elevators being in the
form of an endless chain; a new fash
ion hook and eye for garments patent
ed to James J. Springer, of Philadel
phia; a machin ofor casing and flavor
ing tobacco patented to a North Caro
lina inventor.
The most curious invention issned
for some time, however, secures a fer
ment for ripening milk consisting of
practically pure culture or flavor pro
ducing acid bacteria, the patent being
issued to William Storch, a Dane.
Any information relating to patents
may be obtained from Sues & Co.,
Patent Solicitors, Bee Building, Omaha,
Nebraska.
Grand Excursion to Buffalo July 5th
and 6th.
The _ National Educational Associa
tion will hold its next annual meeting
in ^Buffalo, and the Michigan Central,
“The Niagara Falls Route,” has made
a rate of one fare for the round trip
plus S3.00, association membership fee.
Bend stamp for "Notes for Teachers,”
containing valuable information rela
tive to Buffalo and Niagara Falls, and
10 cents for a summer note book, fully
descriptive and profusely illustrated of
the Summer Resorts of the North and
East
City Ticket Office 119 Adams street,
Chicago, 111. O. W. RDGGLES,
Gen’l Pass’r and Tlt't Ag’t
Many a boy has turned out bad beeauss
his father bore down too hard on- the
grindstone.
Fortunes are made in speculation: *100
invested in one investment system will earn
you *2 per day. Write for particulars.
Chandler & Co , brokers, 100-102-104 Kasota
Block, Minneapolis.
Female bootblacks are numerous on the
streets of Paris.
Only
Think what a long train of diseases arise from
Impure blood. Then keep the blood pure with
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
The One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. $L
Hood’s Pills are always reliable. 25 cents.
The coolness is refreshing;
the roots and herbs invigor
ating; the two together ani
mating. You get the right
combination in HIRES
Rootbeer.
Main on)y by The Charles ¥!. Hires Ce., Philadelphia.
▲ 25c. package makes 5 gallons. Bold everywhere.
CUT-SLASHi
▼ SMOKING TOBACCO, T
f 2 02. for 5 Cents. f
! CUMLASH i
f CHEROOTS—3 for 5 Cents, f
▼ Give a Good, Mellow, Healthy, T
ft Pleasant Smoke. Try Them. ft
f LYOA t €0. TOBACCO WORKS, Dirlun, N. C. ft
How would you like to
bathe in a bath tub 250
feet long and 75 feet wide?
You can—at Hot Springs,
South Dakota.
Book about Hot Springs free if you write
to J. Francis, Gen’l Pass’r Agent, Burling
ton Route, Omaha, Neb._ _
LIMDSEY-OM AHA-RUBBERS!
WELL MAGHINERY
Illustrated catakxrae showing WEU
AUGERS. ROOK DRILLS. U YDBAUUO
AND JETTING MACHINERY, etc. .
snr Fin. Base been tasted and /
all wrreaMd. li
Sloes Cttjr Engine end Iron Works, If
Successors to Pech Ufa- Co. ABSd
_ _ ■••■a S'ltjr. lews. SBS
1114 Wwt Rlsventh Sfr»***fc, K«n>K< • i'
hENSioN»':'.:siZ"“S'S
KSraS'i'a.'tewcsJA'jiat
■ Ijr* u laat war. l&a^iudn-aluigcialino. uli > uuoa.
OPIUM
■•UlCuaa, Rut. taunt. Thnawadr
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