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About Capital city courier. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1885-1893 | View Entire Issue (July 19, 1890)
CAPITAL CITY COURIER, SATURDAY, JULY tg, 1890 fcl L We are Showing, Clothing, Hats, Caps AND Furnishing Goods At Low Prices. CALL IN AND SEE US. STORES AT 1017-1019 O St., LINCOLN, NEB. Beatrice, Neb. Falls City, Neb. Weeping Water, Neb. and Wilber, Neb. Herman Bros. A. M. DAVIS & SON, Spring Carpets ? 1112 0 St. 100 Engraved And Copper If you have a Plate, we same, WESSEL PRINTING CO. Courlor Office. Tolophone 253. a Complete Line Mir" And Draperies Telephone 219. AND NOW'S THE TIME TO PLACE YOUR ORDER WITH THE- LINCOLN ICE CO. 1040 0 ST. PHONE J 18. PURE CLEAR ICE I Prompt Delivery. Callng Cards Plate, for $2.50. will furnish 100kCards from at $1.50. 11 34 N Stroot D1SUKKS HOUSEWORK. A YOUNQ GIRL WHO PREFERS TO READ AND IMPROVE HERSELF Huiiif Coli-lilf rations Upon I lie Attltnd of llin I'tlitrntril Young W'oiiiitn of Tim tin) Toward Work In lln Dime In Ilia Hoiim- .Menial Dutli-n Dlunltliil. Tho following letter ha Ihtii triolved at this olllcei "I wish to Mato 111) casu to you. Two yonrs ago I was graduated at a nrliool for girl. Since that time 1 have lived nt homo with my parents I llku to read and Htudy, hut my mother thinks I ithouhl keep my self busy forthu greater part of tho day about housework and sowing. Now, I do not llku housework and I do llku to study, and furthermore, It seems to mo that I should Ik) doing wrong to give ku much time to housework when I might Iw I in proving myself Now will joii tell in cundldlyjustwhnt you think about It, and oblige jour truly, Oi.ivi " .hint what wo think about what, Oliver' You should bo a llttlo moru definite In stating your nerds In a casu so desperate as thin appears to bo What th wo, think nbotit j our hav Iiik to do huusow ork when you would prof or to stuil'yf Wo think your preference U nut llrnt to lo consulted. Tliulieed for your doing It Istho llrst iiies tlon to bo answered, and you should have given us hoiuu Indication of this A llltAVh I'KOllI.l.M Hut lot us Is-gln nt tho beginning Tho problem you state Is n nmo one, and ouo that Is every now and tlit-n coining up to lo decided With women entering Into tho broad fields of tho higher tdticutinu and sipping tho sweets of a constantly widening- culture, whllo tho sphere specially designated as "wimimi'n" still claims ho much of their thought and attention, It is pertinent to ask and to discuss w hat shall bo tho attitude of tho educated young woman of today toward tho undignified and unpleasant details of housework Tho pervading opinion In tho minds of men yes and of women, too In reganl to theso things Is that tho Instinct for house hold duties Is Innate In tho truly womanly heart. This much is true: The love of homo and family Is inborn in tho heart of every woman. Household duties she tol erates becauso shu loves these others Hut no woman feels a hidden longing for tho companionship of puts and pans, or feels her w hole soul go out in yearning toward sauces and s'lluds, or recognizes the cook ing range as next of kin. No woman lows theso things. Nor should she. That sho does them is of grace and not of nature This proposition may bo laid down at tho outset as broad enough to cover all tho ground A woman ought to do Just as much of tho housework in n house as actual necessity lays upon her in securing tho comfort and welfare of tho home To do less than this is iinvvorthj; to do more, merely for the sake of work, is undigni fied And hero is where you failed to Ik) explicit, Olive How necessary Is It that this work should In) done by the women members of your family? If jour father Is able to supply tho means wherewith strong hands that have no other accom plishment may Imj secured to do this work for you, and If you should then elect to bo your own hewer of wood and drawer of water, you would 1h lacking In a proper sense of personal dignity and of tho Illness of things. You could, as you suggest, use your time to much better advantage. OIIM.8, DON'T MOL'.ST TOO HIGH Hut on tho other hand, don't mount too high u horse, Ollvo. Don't feel too keenly tboaluo of your time and tho duty of Improving yourself. Just try to be a wise, healthy minded, sensible girl, and the self improvement may lie taken for granted. It appears altogether prohibit' from your letter that there Is somo necessity for your doing your share of the household work. If it 1k so, If in any way the burden of home cares Is tho heavier for your mother or for others because of jour withdrawal from them, then you ought to be ashamed of yourself if you are unwilling to drop book or essay or brush nnd bnru jour ow n young strong arm and firing your own active brain to tho rescue The dignity is in the worker, not in tho work; and if you meet the dullest, mean est, most uncongenial detail of household life bravely and cheerfully, and discharge it just as well as joii possibly win, you will llnd tho whole round of menial duties In coming dlgnliled and ofmobled. So they will minister qulto as much to your hap piness and to tho improvement of jour mind and to j our spiritual growth as the best books you can read in the greatest numbers. New York Evening Sun. Colleen (JlrU. The fact that tho number of Wcllesley and Harvard annex graduates from Hoston s much smaller than one would naturally suppose It to Imj recalls thoremaik mailo not long ago by a woman much interested in tho education of girls belonging to fash ionable society. "A society girl," this lady said, "loses caste by going to college " There cnti be but little doubt that tho daughters of thu four hundred do not go to college Advanced education Is not a bulpo of thecasto to which the; belong TIuto Is a present analogy which touches this case Phlllpa I-'awcett could not be a vv rangier tho law of tho university was against that- and so her genius created for her n grade higher still, and sho camo out of the contest "abov e senior wrangler." The society girl mayloso her caste by going to college, but she gets intoacasto above the caste. Boston Transcript. Women's Ileiul Dr.-m. l.ittlo women should wear small hats and slui lo hair dress One often hears a tall woman say when trying on a largo hat "Oh, I could not think of wearing this hat; vv hy , It adds at least nix inches to my height, and I think I am tall enough now." And sho forthwith proctitis to buy a little bit of a hat scarcity distinguish able from hei Psycho knot Hut if shu wore a large hat thu head would appear larger and in bettei pioportlon to tha body St Louis Post-Dlspatih It is cruel to put black s'oeklngs tli.it crock on little hildren and then use u ttltf llesh brush ol sapolioto it move the dye from the tender leet and limbs If moth ers cannot nlford to pay $1 , an exorbi tant prke, bj tin waj, for but dye black hosiery, In the name of humanity let them wear brown, gi ay oi oven glaring whllo. Illuesoap, lendering the tmploj incut of hluliii; In laundry work uiinetissarj, U made by Incorporating with oidinary soap a solution of aniline giieu in strong atctlo acid. Hy tho action of the alkali of tho soap the given is louvurtc-d into blue, uni form h luliillllg thu muss , Keepn bo of powdered Innax near tho Mtihru fclnh. A small i(uaiitlt) in thu watei In vv llih di-fb lowcu iro wmht d in b ll lul l'l 1 1 e m.ltti .' of Jci..tbiliH TO THE CRICKET. Dldt thou not foA ami fret inn to And fro, Hwct spirit of thli summer circlet n-M, With Hint ipilrt voleo of thine, thrt would not yield Its inmnliiK, though t mused nnd soiiKht It to" lint now I ntn central lo let It go, To llo nt length A-iil watch llio sn Minns iax, As hlltho nnd restful as tho quid RniM, Content only lo listen, nnd to know Tlint year shall turn nnd iiimnii-n yrl -,1ml Slllllf, And I slinll llo beneath Uipm tuny lug I res, Htlll Iktt nlnj- tlmKi Imply At lAHt III Mil) And render In soma happier venm tllrlnii Tlmt frleiidl), homely, haunting ksvIi of thine, Tlint lierfeet iittrruiicfi of content nnd ca-p A. lAinpninn In He-rlhncr's. New lurk's I'litt-ir's I'leld. Tho Potter'a Held was dllTerent from what I uxectcl It had nothing revolting about it, but was peaceful and oven n pretty plate, with plenty of grass and tree and birds around It, The process of burial is to dig a grave llfty feet long bj fifteen wide, which will contain successive lujon of colllus (vvhlto pino "shells" tvventy-twn Inches widu at tho chest Ij lug end to etui and numbered from ono to twenty live and then back from tvventy-lho to llfty The uumlHTs are cut deep Into the lid of each shell and then carefully marked In a book of record with descriptions, etc., appended In this way ll is easy to Identify and ills intern burled laxly, nnd tho overseer told mo that ho had last week dug up a bod) that had Im.oii burled eleven years, and not only could Identify It readily, but that the printing on thu card nailed agnlust the head of tho box was almost as plain iu when burkd Very nearly 70,(XK) persona have been buried In tho Hart's Island Pot tor's Held, and of this number nearly three tourths were children under 7 years of ngo. This tells Its own sad story of tho neglect and misery that are tho Inheritance of the children of tho poor. Now York Cor. Philadelphia Record. Newspaper lloiitoa Are Viiliiuhln. The fact that you regularly recelvo am) pay for your paper Is worth to tho carrier, in the form of good will, fi If you llvo In Atlanta, Huston, Cincinnati, Chicago, Cleveland, I.oulsvlllo, or St. Paul, ffa If in Pittsburg, San Francisco, or St. loiils, and ?. If In New York, Philadelphia, or Washington Even your circumstances are taken Into account wealth, age, dis position us affecting your likelihood to continue a subscriber. A route owner, who regularly receives from a subscriber twelvu icnU per week for Tho Philadel phia Public Icdgcr, holds thu name ol that subscriber, when lie sells his route, at a st I IT ft to tV-thu highest, If its list la taken as a w hole, of any Journal In Amor lea. Carriers deliver 1X1,000 copies of The Philadelphia Public ledger Ncvspncr routes are worth from &00 to (2,000 In At lauta, Hiltimore, Hostoti, Milwaukee, and New Orleans, from t-100 to 1,000 In Cleve land Minneapolis ami Pittsburg, and from $1,000 to Ci.OOO In Chicago, Cincin n.itl, Deliver, New York, Philadelphia, San Pram Isco and Washington. Eugoui M. Camp in Century. llilliltn of the llormi. Tho schoollxjy w ho w rotu that thu horso wus a uoblu animal was right, lie might have added that thu horse knows his busi ness. A horse knows all about himself, and If ho had somo of tho faculties which men have thu horse could cure his own ail ments. There are somo horses that novel get olT their feet. I have known horsca tlint would stand for months. Standing seems to be the natural attitude of the horse I lu sleeps in that position, it Is a very rare thing to llnd a horse sleeping in any other position A horso that is sickly seldom if ever lies down, particularly if his dlsoa.su Is In tho lungs. So you see that the habits of the horse, in some respects ftt least, nre entirely tlllferunt from thu habits of 11 man. When you work nil day you rest by stretching yourself at length oil a bed or touch; you don't stand up. The horse, its I said before, does When you aro sick you go to lied, but tho horso re mains standing. Interview In Chicago Tribune How tlio I'euiiut Grows. The peanut Ino is a plant similar to the sweet potato, Tho most remarkable feature Is that when thu llowur falls tho stalk sup porting tV'suiull undeveloped fruit length ens, and bending toward tho ground pushes thu fruit Into thu ground, w lieu it begins to enlarge and ripen. Tho peanut may le cultivated in northern gardens by those vv ho w Ish to w itness the strange habit of pushing thu pod uudcr tho ground to ripen, but tho fruit, will not comu to perfection, as It rcquln-s a long, warm summer in which to duvclop, Thu peanut is planted in thu early part of May lu ground pre pared as for wheat or corn, thu kernels Imj lug placed about two feet apart. Thu crop matures lu thu latter part of October, when it is gathered and put through a sweat for about a month. Thu nuts aro thou picked from the stums or main vine by hand and aru sent to tho various cleaning establish incuts to be cleaned and graded. St. Loula Post-Dispatch Women lu IliinliH'nt. Women aru Intolerant of ouu another in bushiest aud Intensely Jealous in society. Mistress and servant aru not tho only classes ls.'tw eon w horn dignity of demeanor is set aside. Ami thou the uukliiilncss! it makes a generous spirit shudder Said a poor washerwoman, who lias a family of seven to support! "The gentlemen I wash for givu me old clothes enough for my three little Ikijs, but I have never had live cents' worth from ouu of thu ladles They give 1110 old dresses and cloaks and sumo times u hat, but for each I have done two orthieo weeks' washing In payment. That isn't nil They aru all thu time accusing mo of stealing their handkerchiefs." New York World It") al Mori IiuiiU. In the Thirteenth century the Venetians were masteis of the sea, and some of their wealthy merchants, as the Samldos, the .liistliii.ini, thu firimaldl aud others.erectetl principalities in divers places of thu archi jelago, which their descendants enjoyed fur many centuries. These self created pilnies were lulled "royal merchants." Dry (ioods Chronicle. "Comliit; I'tiinU," i;it. Mauilo Just wall one minute. Clara is coming Harry -Inileedf I don't sio her Maude You stupidl Theru's tho front of her now swell hat coming around the cornel She'll bo hero presently Pitts burg Htlllctin The agi icultural college professors hav a llgiired it out that two little sparrow s lu tin ytais will prodiieoan antf-try of 275, 7IO,l),J birds Well, thatisu t moru tliau a bird or two out'of the way at most. Ancient Homo was novor so populous ns Now Yolk. In the enith of her fame shu did not probably contain a million people, lirooklyn is Ji- sucuueity, is lo size, a khe was iu her b'-'lj l.lfo oi rmt-.il. It has been reconlrd that pollen iIom not lose Us Itallty at ouco on lielng discharged from the author, but If kept dry Is capnbln of frrt Hiring for omo time afterward, This fact has bcutt found useful In discussing theories of cross fertlll-.utlon, Somo flow its, iw many composUre, mature tho stamen licforotho pistil, which pushes up, carry ing tho pollen with It, and not having Us stigma in "receptive condition" for several days after In many Instances Tho pollen on tho stigma would bo of noavall if It lost the power of doing good as soon as It left tho author cull, In that case new pollen from other (lowers would bring alHiut cross fertlllrntloti. If Its own pollen pre served Its vital power It would bo on hand fur Its work thu moment tho stigma Iw camo mature. Thus tho iiiostlou iHsatuo ono of cousld orahlo Importance, and tho fact ascertain ed, as noted, tlint pollen did retain power for somo time, had an unusual Interest. Attention being thus called to It, varied ex periments have been made, and It Is now ascertained that pollen, llku other things endow oil with life, has a varied period of existence, Mr Ulttlnghaiw, of llonn, ha recently published an account of somo In terestlng experiments. He llnds thu aver- ngo duration of life In pollen to lsi from tidily to forty days, Tho narcissus took sixty-six days before It Dually lost thu power of omitting pollen ttils's; thu peony, llftj'-clghtj camellia, Hfty-onoianela, forty two. Of all thosuho oxor!mctitcd with, the cyclamen pollen had tho lightest hold on llfp, Incoming dead pollen when seventeen day sold These discoveries will he of great practical Use, enabling tliohjbrldlerto.got pollen from long distances for III experi ments -Christian I'lilon Ntutl-llr- of Inillnu Clill.lrrn, The aborigines of America now residing In the ImiiiikIs of thu Uultisl States hav !M,000 children Iwtvv eon 0 and 10 years ol ago, excluding thu live civ lll.ed tribes and the Now York Indians, Tor eight j can from 1H70 tho annual average Increasu in thu Indian education fund was 75 per cent. Then camo a check, and in 1887 there wa ll decrease of U.0 per cent, at a time when by the passage of tho severalty act, ojieti lug thu door to citizenship, an en large meat of thu fund was needed Congress should either support thu lu dlan schools with some approach to ado t'liucy or it should abandon all efforts ami Invito the return to savagery of tho young persons already partly educated. Indeed, somu members of congress advocate this policy on thu ground that tho educated girls and boys who go back to thu plain nnd forest relapho Into barbarism liecaiisc they havo no moral support among the tribes to vv hlch they belong Hut ofllclal figures show thu fallacy oi this contention. Of thu 2U.I total returned students from thu school at Hampton, Vn , tho record on Jan. 1, lbUO, shows that (11 were pronounced "oxcellent," 175 "good," 8'J "fair" ami only 85 "unsatisfactory." U there a vv 111 to school hav lug a bettor record! Of thu whole iiii!iiIm.t 113 aru regular teach ers, tVI own aud work farms, 18 work at trades, -IU girls nru well married, 215 boys and girls aru pupils at other schools and many of thu residue aru prolltably em ployed. Thu record of thu C'arllslu school is not at hand in full, but In It&O there had gone back to -15 tribes KW pupils, Of thesu 2M w ero teachers, Mlnttendlug other schools, It! at government work, 'J7 farming for themselves, (13 were deud and only 41 of thu living were doing nothing. Washington Stnr. "Tho Music of thu Cul-ieni-. Havo tho Chinese ever exerted any In fluence on tho progress of music At Hrst sight it would scum to bo Impossible for a nation delighting In liberies of what seems to us to be dissonances to havo had any connection with an art so harmonious us our own. Hut this U a rather seeming dilTcrcucu than a real one. If music be tho art of exciting thu emotions by com binations of sound, then thu Chinese dis cords must nlso be ranked as music, for they certainly do arousu thu deepest oino tlous In the Celestials. The ancient Chinese knew far more of tho principles of intisle than the civilized Greeks or Romans oven, but as usual with tho discoveries of tills self isolated race, tho founding of a system of musical laws did not beticllt the world any more than themselves. Thus it was with printing, with the compass and many other of tho ancient Chinese iuv eiitinns and discnv erles. Yet it is probable that tho Chinese woru the 11 rat nation to adopt and formulate a system of notation. Hoston Musical Hernld riunia uk :ill-illi:lne. Pew seem to know of the great modi dual qualities possessed by clams It would seem as If nature In this bivalve bail provided a sure remedy for thu dys pepsia which Is so ptuvalent iu tho I'nlUvl States, especially among thu over hurried and over worried Inhabitants of our largo eastern cities. It is not too much to say that by tho Judicious use of clams, both of tho hard and soft shell varieties, wrsons can keep thtmsches in excellent condition without the use of any other medicines, which as is known usually leavo tho stomach iu a wtaker condition than it wns beforu the said medicines were used, nnd after a se vere course of drastics, which only tem porarily relievo tho digestive organs, such a condition often results that continued usoof purgatives Is-comes necessary Phil ndelphla ledger. T. .th nt m:i,iiso l.u.h. A w hole page could Is) filled with stnte i cuts of fabulous priies paid by the relic worshljHTs Tho hat worn by Napoleotl at Hylan was sold Iji Paris in ls'15 for W00 Tho coat worn by C'lmrhs XII at tho battle of Pultowa brought over SIOO.OOO. A wig that once belonged to Sterne, the great Hnglish writer, was sold at publlo auction in Ioudou a few yeais ago for 1,050 In lSlDa tooth or Sir Isaac Newton was purchase-1 by a nobleman for $3,50 The buyer had a tostly diamond remnvid from his favorite ring and tho tooth sit iu Its phi' e St Louis Republic Ilirter. ill i llt-lvKi'ii Suiiil. Theru is llttlo diirereiiro letwts.'ii thu and of thu sea and that of thu desert '1 here is iiouo iu formation, for Ixith aro minpo.scd of quart. Thu sand of the ten i duo to tho transport of thu matt rial be livers and grinding by tho waves on the ' st ashore. In tho Sahara and other African legions, its well as in Central Asia, tho dally rango of temperature is very great Chatter It is nportul that 1' T Itanium whllo ii Knghiud Mimed on u ry sisiui negotia tions with the view of buying thu Shakes pea re homestead for thu puiposr of pulling it down and exhibiting it around the umulij He bid as high ns iiijoo for it, tuii. when he thought hu had m-euivd tho pidous rein tho EuglUh govirmueiit bid i. M moie, and thu negotiations wore do- ' nisi nt nu end NOWS' THE TIME TO PLACE YOUIl OIlDEll KOH House Decorations! Where they will iccelvc prompt nttciitlou nnd skillful workmanship, Call on S. E. MOORE, nnd see his Hue of I'lnc Paper Hangings, 1 K34 O STREET Sole Agency for Tho Sherwin-Williams Co.'s Paint. Roberts & Co. 212 North nth Street, Undertakers i andEmbalmers. Telephoned. Olllcu t f 5 Resilience 15ft Open Day nnd Nlgnt E. T. ROBERTS, WESTERFIELDS Palace Bath Shaving PARLORS. Ladles -and- Children's- Hair- Cutting ASP2CIA I TY. COR la k () STS NKW HURU HL'IC TTnnrcceclented Attraction I w 0VEB A MILLION DI8TUIBUTED Louisiona State Lottery Comp'y. Iiicorpoiiitcd by the ly-Klnlatiiro for Edu cational i nil Charitable purpose-, It frunclilHo tiinilo n part of the present slut constitution InlHTU hy an ovtirivholmlnjr l)p illar vote, uml To continue until January 1st, 1895. Its MAMMOTH DRAWINGS take nlncc Scml Annunlly (June and Decem ber), nnd Its Grand Single Number Draw ings tnkc nlncc in ench of thu other ten months of theenr, nnd are nil tirnwn In public, nt the Academy of Music, New Orleans, La. FAMED FOR TWENTY YEARS For Integrity of Its Drawings, nnd Prompt I'n-'inent of Prizes, Attested ns follows: "Wo do horeliy certify that wo supcrvlsu tho urriiiiKumeuls for all tho Monthly aud Semi Annual Drawing of Tho IiuUlann Htuto (.ottcry Company, and III person mail nint and control (lie I)niwIiiih themselves, and that Ihusamo aro conducted with hon esty fairness, and lu uood fait li toward all parties, mid w o authorize tho Coijauy lo use tills certificate, vv Itli fnc-sliiiillcs of our kIkiiu u res attached, In Its iidvcrtlneiiients." fif CominUsloncrs. We, the iinde-ralirned Hanks and Hankers wllltmr all tirlzes drawn lu tho Louisiana Htuto ixitturlus, which may tsi presented at our counters. It. M. WALMHLI'Y, t'res. Louisiana Nat Il'lc I'IKItKK LANAUX, I'res.Htatu National ll'lc A. BALDWIN, I'res. Now Orleans Natl Hank CAHLKOIIN, l'res Union National llanlc Grand Monthly Drawing, At ths Academy of Mnilo, New Orl'tni, Toe-day, Asguit 12, 1890. CAPITAL PRIZE, $300,000 K0, Tickets at tJOeach: Halves $10; Quar ter fi, Tenths 1 Twentieths 1. MHTOI I'lttFS. 1 l-HIXi: I1K ITiiO.lsw In .. . , i i,iti.i:oKfiiu.(M)iH I I'ltl.I'OK &0,0UMs i I'lti.i: ok avoiwis 2l'IUZi:sOK I0,unro . ... 11'ltIKH Ol B,i)U0 are 2.5 I'ltlZLHOK LOW aro . llHl'KIZLHOK ftJOaro It) I'lll.KHOK .VWaro fAll'HI.l'.HOK -.iJOare AI'I'HOXIMATIO.V IMIIZKH. 100 Prizes of 17") are IU) ilo. .tun are 100 do. 'JO aro JID.OOU llll.UI) fiO.UOU M,a iWO 2-5,000 &VU) IW.0U) 100,000 moru J0.0U) 20,000 Tl- IIMIVAI, I'lllZKS. Vjn Prizes of 1) aro .. OOOPrlzukOfllOOaro 03,000 w.oou .1,1 :il I'rlzesnmoiintliiKto l,o.-.l,oo Notk Tickets draw Iiik Capital Pilos aro not cutltletl to terminal Prizes. A.GKE3TTS 'Vv7.AiiTa?E2D fT-KorOlub Itntes or any further Informa tion desired, w rllti leltly lo tho undersigned, clearly statlnir your lesldoiu'e, with Mtato, County, Street and Number. Moru rapid re turn mall di'llVLiy w-lll lioa-i)Ureilly your en closing an l"n elope Itoarlui your lull ad drens. IMPORTANT! Address M A DAUPHIN, New Orltuus, Im. OrM.A DAUPHIN. Washluvtton, I (' Hi ordlmm letlir loiiliiliitui' Mni.i'i Or- ; dor Issued by all l'pnss Companies, New ora i.xeuiiuue, i-ruii or rosiai ,ott sole. Address Registered Letters containing Currency to N'l'W Kill I Ws N VTIDNALHANIC, New Orltsius, Iji. ItLMLMlllMl Uml the pay mi nt or tho I'rlis ikKiinraiitiisI hy I'onr N'utional Dunks r New Orli ai.s, nud the lick, (sun- Mimed by tho 1'rusldi nl ol tin lulllut. in whose char It rtsl rljlits are rivtinulxud In the bluhost lotirts, iliiMi fois , Ik wan i nil imltattuns ur l aiinuy moils scheme lU'.MI.MIILH lluil lliefl'llKMIICOl'lir OK l'lll. I MUD slAI'Hs hits iKelded 1 thai lli IiiiIiiiiii Hiiite lottery I'o lutsii ilN'lHMI Willi tin Mill, of I on kiiuia, i wiiitii ni - Nl IM'IKI- INUL J N- 1 LAin M 1st. i