The Plattsmouth daily herald. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1883-19??, September 21, 1887, Image 2

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    TMK DAILY IIKUaLD, PLATTSMOIJT IT, iNKUilASK A, W KDNKSDA V, SKI'TKMPKU 21, 17.
i)c jJlattsmoutl) Duiln ijeralb,
2rZ jst O ri Xi O 3.,
Publishers & Proprietor.-.
REPUBLICAN STATE CONVENT' N.
Call for the Meeting at Lincoln in
October.
Tli? IN I.iililir.tii ! i lors of tli t;iti; 'of V
tr:isk;i iirt: rc.i. -.l -1 l m-ihI l l-iit-s from
tin- m-vi-r.il niiiiil i-.. to liic-t ill t-o:i Vfiitioii ill
tlx- ojMTii lioiisr, in tin; il y 'of I.iliciiln, Wi-il-ll-silay,
Orliilx r 1 at oVlork t. in., for
flu- iiirio.' of Jp.:ii-i!i!; in iniiiin:il ion ;unli-il:il--
for oi;- sismm-LiIi- just i. of I !l? suilvln
cuurl. :inl lor to iki-iiiIm-is of tl"' Ix'M'l ot
nwuls of Uu: -t-.il- iiiiit rsity, and 10 IrmiK
Kiit-'li other I-u in. -s ;is in;iy 1- .isi-lilil lo tli
convention. THK Al CoKi loMKNT.
'I ho n-vi-nil i-mini mm are i-ntitl-l to n-jm--ftiitulion
:is folov.s, liciiiK based upon Un
vote -:i"t for lion . Jo!ni M. Tliayir, j;ovi-ni.:r,
in t"-i;, twin-?. (::.- il i;:it.- lo earh n-.
county, one il. 1. !?.'t. -at-l;iiK'- to i-:ic!i county,
and one for i ai:l 1 " votes anil the major frac
tion lli-n of :
4-1,1 nti k.s. o r:.s.
Al:inis '5
Anlolopt; K
Aitliur I
Kla no '
;oout
Oil' NT I KS
VCTKS
.IiII.tsoii
.;ilni-on
Ki-ai n-y
Ki-ya l aha
K.itn
K nox
I.ani-a-ler
I.tat-olii
ltaii
l.oii
Madison
M jl'lior.-on
MTii-k
iNaiirr
Nt-malia
Niukoil-
(Mill!
I'awncf
I'lielps .
I'l-ll-tr
i'ial :e
I'oik
ICl-!:t-l-ll
Ki-d illow
SOI
S:iii:ii-
Sa in lors
S"vanl
Slicriilan
Sherman
Stanton
Thayer
Thomas
Valley
Viiliiie;toii
W.ivne.'
Weiister
Wheeler
York
Unorganized l'er'y
I'.rowu
l;nilalo
r.utl.r
liurt
('ll?L-4
II
s
X
:
rio-s '
V.t:ir
lii-y-iiii.:
hciry
riav
Colfax
i 'unlink
es.st-r
imkot-v
Iavcs
I iion
I.iil-
I louia" . . .
I . son
I Mini V .
J'ilmori"
K
H
r
n;
4
;
i;
. in
:t
in
Klllllf'
I'lanl.lm ''
.'r..iiti-r -.
tl.W '!'
lospor
i;r,iut 1
i;ri'-li-v
ilurli.-ld
Hull 11
1 1 ..!) it t uu '
Harlan 7
llav.-s 3
I I if ,r.l- i:
Holt..' " ." " .... II York II
Howard 5
Total 6'J.
It s refommeinieil that no proxies he sulmit
tea to the conve.iith n exei'pt sueh as yre held
hy jiersons rt-i.lln in the counties from which
uroxies are uivcti.
Wai.tf.k M. Skki.y, Secretary
(iKoucK W. Ill kti'X. Chairman.
Republican Primaries.
The ri'puMic.-m oounty convention for
('ass county, will meet tit Plattsmoutl
Oct. 1st, 1SST, lor the )urio.so of select
uu' 15 tlclecratcs to the state convention
to he helil in Liiu olu Oct. tth, 1S87, :uk!
15 ilelcyatcs to the judicial convention
to be hehl at the same place ami date
also, to place in nomination, candidate
for the following county oiliccs:
County Treasurer. County Clerk, Ke-irter ot
Deeds. Slteriil. t oiii.ty Superintendent of In
Hruction, County Jtidjre. Clerk of District
Court, Coroner, Sin veyor and County I oniinis
Moner, 'nd Di'tiiet.
The primaries will he held at the re
spective places throughout the county
Saturday. September 21th, 1SS7, for th
purpose of selecting delegates to the
county convention. The representation
of the A arious precincts will be as fol
lows:
lTattsmouth lt Ward, votes.
2ad C
Tird ' 11 "
i:ii " 7 '
l'reeiuet 7
llockUuils : "
l.iherty 8 "
Avoea "
lit. rieasant
Kiht Mile drove 7
Louisville 10 "
Center "
AVeoiiii.!i Water "
Stove Creek f
F'.Imwood " "
South bend 5
.Salt Creek 10
CreenwooJ 8 "
Tlptou 7
Tetal
II. C lJlTCIIIR,
Secv,
158 ,.
M. M. llCTLKK,
Chairman.
Mind Your Business.
It is the safe rule, the only safe rule.
A man has enough to do to attend to his
own ptiaincss. The man who attempts
to correct his neighbor's delinquencies
is himself liki-lv to iret into trouble. If
the neighbor is going in wrongful and
unlawful courses, let the law and its
nroner ministers ileal with him. That is
what the law and the olliccss are for.
This is a serums matter. J;ut it is
tenfold more serious to intefere with an
individual who is acting within the lim
its of the law for others to undertake
to menace, to constrain, to unlawfully
injure him. The individual may, in
deed, bo exasperating and vexatious to
his fellows, aud yet keep within the
limitations of the law. There are such
cases where forbearance is hard, and for
that very reason the golden admonition,
"mind vour own business," is all the
more needful of imprcsslye remembrance.
I.ut when it comes to lawless aggres
sion upon an individual who has con
fessedly done no more than irritated spite
ful malign incy by action of undisputed
legality and that, too, in pursuance of
conscientious regard for public duty
then the offence assumes the most serious
form. 'When, under such circumstances,
men fail to mind their own business, fail
to remember the lawful rights of a citi
zen, and agree or act together to intlict
violence upon him, let it be in what de
gree soever, they become criminals, and
criminals of the most dangerous sor..
They then heroine movers in a conspira
cy of Midi quality that the very founda
tions of society are undermined. So
dangerous is .such offence that it cannot
be admitted in the case of lawless aggres
sion without setting up the major pre
mise from which the destruction of all
law and of the order of society necessa
rily follows.
If one man. or one combination of men,
may with impunity violently aggress up
on tin; person of another with law less
hands, then any other man or any other
rombiiiat ion of men may do the .same
thing; and this is anarchy. It may sit iua
light thing to an excited man or a gang
of men who have conceived a spile
uiraiust some individual, to plan to in
timidate him, to "slug" him, to give him
"a black eye," and by such force to drive
him from a lawful coursa of action. l!':t
society in its right and sob-r mind dors
not .so regard it. Society can no nnire
loh-rate an exertion of lawless force suf
ficient to black tin eye than it can toler
ate an exertion of lawless force to da-h
out the brains of the victim. It is not the
degree of force, but the lawles.-j quality
of it, which renders it the deadly foe of
society.
Hence the law proclaims stringent pen
alties against violent outrage of what
ever tlegrr. J fence, too, tne law ilc
clares that the man who plots or attempts
wrongful aggression upon another, when
in the urosecution thereof that other h
killed, is a murderer, and punishable for
the guilt of murder. Hence, again, th"
law regards so seriously tin; crime of
conspiracy to intlict forcible injury upon
the person of a citien. And the law-
is right in till this, lieing right, the law
should be vindicated against all infrac
tions of the fundamental condition of
society vindicated promptly, complete
ly, even sternly.
Nothing less than the stem enforce
ment of the law will teach thoughtless,
obstreperous, vicious men the necessity,
to others, if not to themselves, of mind
ing their own business. Sioux -'ity
Journal.
Beeson's Opinion
County Attorney Ilceson says the an
notated statutes of Nebraska, composed
by AVhedon ifc "Wooslcy, are a failure, in
his opinion, and that it now lays in his
ollice covered with dust and moth. The
wonderful intellect that lies unmolested.
El wood Ecli o.
.ruD;r: ki.mkh s. dunuv's opinion.
Messrs. Wooslty & Whtdon, Lincoln,
Nth:
Accept my sincere thanks for the
splendidly bound copy of your annota
ted statutes of Nebraska. After a care
ful examination of the works, I am more
than ever pleased with the manner in
which your labors have been performed.
You deserve success in your undertaking
and I hope you will receive it.
Ei.miik S. Dundy.
I will say that we received similar
testimonials from Judges Lake, Maxwell
and Cobb, of the supreme bench of the
state. I am willing for the people to
judge whose opinion they would rather
receive In the matter and in regard to
the book l'ing on the shelf covered with
dust and moth, will simply call the re
tention of the people of Cass count' to
the manner in which he conducts the
prosecutions for the county and ask
them whether they had not already
come to the conclusion that all of his
books are in the same condition.
C. A. AVOOSLEY.
A Flnei:ai. in Costa Kica. A fa
miliar sight in Costa Rica is a death pro
cession. "When some one is dying the
friends send for a priest to shrive him.
The latter comes, not silently and solemn
ly, a minister of grace and consolation,
but accompanied by a brass hand, if the
family are rich enough to pay for it (the
priest receiving a liberal commission on
the business), fir, if they are poor, by a
number of boys ringing bells and chant
ing hymns, llehind the band or b: 11-boys
are two acolytes, one bearing a crucifix
and the other sw inging an incense urn,
Then follows the priest in a wooden box.
or chair, covered by a canopy, and car
ried hv four men wearing the sacrament- !
al vestments, and holding in his hand, j
, .
covered with a napkin, the Host the j
emblem of the bodv of Christ.
People '
upon the streets kneel
I as the procession j
; I? i . 1
passes, and then follow
WXUII 11. .1 Hill 11 III" '
"
me nousc oi tue oying. me nana or oei:- .
ringers stand outside, making all the
disturbance they can, while the pritst,
f olio wed by a motley rabble, enters the
death chamber, administers the sacrament,
ind confesses the dying soul. Then tho
procession returns to the church as it
came. Going and coming and while at
the house the band plays or the bells are
rung constantly, and every man, woman,
and child within hearimg fall upon their
knees, whether upon the streets or at :
their labor, ami breathe a prayer for the j
departing spirit. I
Funerals are occasions of great cere- '
.. . .
mony. Notices, or avisos, as they ate.
called, are printed r.r.d posted upon all
of the dead-walls, like announcements of
an auction or an opera, and printed invi-
t . 1 ' ' .
tations are sent to all the acquaintances
of the deceased. The priests charge a
large fee for attendance, proportionate
. . j - - 1
to the means of the family, and when
-
hey arc poor it is common for some one i
to solicit contributions to pay it. The
spect acle of a beggar sitting on a street
corner a.-king alms to pay the burial fee
of his wife or child is a very common
one. ami quite as oiten one can see a
father carrying in his arms to the ceme
t r' the coflin of a little one, not bring
able to pay for a priest anil a carriage
too. AV. II. (h utis. iii Jfarn-r's Mt
mi J'ur Oi-l,,l,ir,
Tiii:i:i: is not much probability that
the republican national convention will
put f tirth Liii'-ohi and (Jrant, but if they
sh'iuhl be nominated, there is a very
strong probability that they would sweep
the country. The canvass w ith these men
for standard bearers, will retire the d m-of-rats
as conpb ti ly as they were when
Abraham Lincoln ran.
Ih'.'ti: .Mos;' wants an "uprising." So
do the pr. ,! of tin? United States an
"uprising" of lli-rr Most at the end of a
U'ii'i'1 strong cord of hemp. Sioux ('U
JollVlltll.
It is hoped by all good people that the
"uprising" will soon he had.
Milan-., anil Deijraaoa 1'oor.
Waihi:i'.;tu:i market ia tho cause for tiro ex
tsteneo of tho most singular of tho slums of
Kt w York. Thero has grown up near tho
great fond bazar a population of as shiftless
ami degraded poor as wo shelter people who
c:;j eet to proeuro most of what they eat by
picking it up out of wasto barrels anil bas
kets f t he biitfhers,fishn'iongers and fruiterers
of t!i) market. They send their children to
collect this innutritious and often un whole
homo waste, and seldom Luy anything except
bread, sugar, tea or coffee, which they re
gard as luxuries, to be dispensed with when
ever their idleness, drunkenness and shil't
lessiu ss r.ivvcnt their buying them. They
live more cheaply, but nothing like a9 well
ns tuo thrifty (Jermnns of Cannon street on
the far oast fiIe, who cluster iu crowds oppo
fcitc the shabby basement f a Teuton, who
font; ac'.s with tho principal hotels to tako
lis iv t.-.Mu and kitchen leavings as well as
swill for next to nothing, and who, bringing
ills lo:.d home iu a wagon, sorts out tho cake,
pud ling, poultry, meat, cereals and fruit
often already separated in cracked dishes,
paper parrels and tins and doles them out
t o generously that for five cents a family can
have a meal, and for twenty-live cents
riiough of everything to keep a household a
day. Xew York Letter.
Time Flics Swiftly.
All old grandma vviih a small boy
hoarded a d atiut avenue car the other
day, and the collector rang the register
twice.
AVhnt's that for?" she asked.
'That's 2 o'clock," answered the lx)y.
In a !in:ii;ic or two another passenger
got :;. and n;iii the register rang.
Three o'clock!" exclaimed the old
lady as she bobbed around on her seat.
"My stars! but how time does fly in a
c it v . " I Jrt n it Free Press.
I'orci'S tliat Seldom Slcop.
Recent delicate scientific experiments
have discovered the fact that the surface
of the land is never absolutely at rest for
i:;re than thirty hours at a time. Thus,
those great earthquakes which mako
tpiiclis in history aro merely extreme
cases i f forces that seldom slee:). Public
Opinion.
The khan of Khiva has founded a Rus
sian school in his capital, where Khivan
i ov.i of good birth and between the ages
of 11 and 11 learn the Russian language
it the khan's expense.
Tsovol Drinkiog Glasses.
A novel fashion at seaside resorts this
season has been the introduction among
v ery rich women of a drinking glass
especially designed for the purpose of
imbibing tho particular kind or kinds of
mineral water that milady affects. These
glasses, tho first of which was, of course,
imitortod from Paris, aro of various de
signs more or less elaborate, some of
them revealing tho most exquisite work
manship. They are fastened. to a gold
or silver chain and worn dangling from
the belt. The custom, which is a new
one, i.4 naturally in danger of being car
ried to excess and serving as an excuse
for vulgar display. This is true of all
new fashions; but, on the other hand, it
cannot be denied that a private and ele
gant glass from which to qualT sulphur
or Hawthorne water is vastly more de
sirable and agreeable than drinking the
same liquids out of a coarse tumbler that
lias been pressed by the hps of thousands
of the common herd.
And since tho imagination plays so
large a role in our actual experiences, it
may K questioned whether the obnoxious
flavors of mineral waters generally would
not be materially -modified for the better
by the prolonged use of these individual
aesthetic glares. Vie all know that
champagne taken out of a tin cup or a
t-th niug loonies at once insipid and
disagreeable. From a logical standpoint,
thcrt;fore. aml in inverse ratio, even sul-
phur water might Income palatable in
proportion to the magnificence of the
drinking glass. At Saratoga a lady well
, , . t- , . ,
I.-mw-ii in A..-e orlr ntv hns nno of
lhaiiQ p.;at.s lhat is a marvel of art. It
is made of the thinnest and purest crystal
in the "'l' of an ordinary tumbler.
ariiiiiiii i ue ro're is u. uouoio lun ui iui-
quoises set in a gold rim, and below this
a number of tiny diamonds. The chain
that attaches this costly trifle to the
wearer's side is of alternating links of
ci nl tossed gold and deep blue enamel,
also inlaid with jewels. Strange to say;
tne lady is hardly satisfied with it, how-
ever, and thinks of sending abroad for
f y krVattr P. Llara Lanza m
lv 5inc;;-iQ I it -I-niinfi I
(Jroning Glacier.
Conformably to the laws of advance
f,r'a re,V'eat glaciers, it is said those in
the vallev of Chamouuc. Switzerland, .ire
nmv winmnir to advance. The lowpr
extremity of the Glacier des Cossons is
"not U1(,1G than 3,000 feet above the level ;
l V"- a' u"u " fcuul 1?wor- '
During tho past three years this lower !
extremity -has advanced at the rate of !
fifty yards a year." It ia said that "a 1
ST"0 cut out of the ice in May, 1SG0, a ;
iiuoi in mil's x i KJixi uic a n ti 1 1 1 l v . fins
' .i i
mov eu down more than sxxtv varus. .
Nwr York Ilour.-
A Schoolmate f Dlrn?l!.
As Mrs. Jiisraeli's bedroom was always
encurnlxred with her husband's Ixxikfl,
Uenjamin might well say ho was "bom
in a library." Shortly after Benjamin's
birth Mr. Disraeli went to reside fit Theo
bald's road, and I have often Ik'ci taken
there, by my father. "When he left Theo
bald's loud and went to reside in (looms
bury hquaro I cannot recall to mind, but
when there, ::ml when 1 was In-tween !
and 1( years of age, my father consulted
Mr. Disraeli ;us to where to send nie to
school, and be recommended the Rev.
John Potticany, of Filiott place, lilack
heath, where he had placed Iti-njamin
tho Imys always called him Jack. ieorge
was his nephew and taught in the scbml,
which accounts for tho mistakes made in
other reiKii Is.
When my father took me to school he
handed ine fiver to Pen, as he alway.-t
called him. I looked up to him as a big
lioy, and very kind In; was to nte, making
me sit next to him in play hours, and
amusing me with stories of robljers and
caves, illustrating them with rough pencil
sketches, which he continually rubbed
out to make way for fresh fines, lie
was :v very rapid reader, was fond of
romances, and would often let me nit by
him and read the same l)ok, gxd
naturedly wailing before turning a leaf
till he knew 1 had reached the bottom of
the page. lie was very fond of playing
at horses, and would often drive me and
another boy as a pair with string reins,
lie was always full of fun, and at mid
bummer, when he went home for the
holidays in the basket of the P.Iackheath
coach, lired away at the passers by with
a jea shooter. Rev. E. Jones in London
Standard.
Artists In Crime.
criminal classes in Mexico are
The
among the most accomplished artists in
their line to lie found anywhere on the
face of the earth, and possess, moreover,
a marvelous powt r of simulating inno
cence, which enables thnu to impose
upon the most incredulous. They em
ploy the latter faculty to great advantage;
in securing situations as servants, in
which capacity they find ample scope for
their genius. If you detect them in
thieving and discharge or punish them,
their viiidicliveness knows no bounds,
and they will boldly threaten future ven
geance. Nor are they slow in concocting
schemes to that end with sundry gentle
men of the garrote or the stiletto who
outwardly as respectable as anybody
prowl the streets nightly in the interests
of their employers. The pleasant possi
bilities arc that some fine evening, when
you least expect it perhaps as you are
returning from the opera, humming a
favorite morceau, or revolving sweet
plans for love or lucre such fancies will
lie dispelled by a sudden rain of cudgels
upon your devoted head, or, w-orse yet,
by the keen thrust of a habaja into the
back of your liest claw hammer Coat just
between the shoulders. If you lie not
killed outright and yell for tho jioliee, the
chances aro ten to cne (you being a
foreigner) that the assassins will assert,
in voluble Spanish, that you attempted lo
murder them, and the police will finish
what they failtxl to accomplish. Irish
Times.
3Iusici:mft In Xcw York.
New York contains about 300 orches
tral players capable of taking part in
musical performances of the highest
class. Mr. Thomas' orchestra at tho fes
tival in the Seventh regiment armory in
contained 300 players, and Dr.
Damrosch's of the year previous 2.0. In
both cases musicians were brought from
other cities, because it was, of course,
impossible to command the services of ail
the capable players in New York for
tjiese monster occasions; but thero are
the number mentioned of good orches
tral musicians in the city. Counting all
the members of military bands, theatrical
orchestras, makers of dance music, and
others in humbler walks of the art, the
musical population foots up over 3,000.
It is doubtful whether any city in the
world contains so many musicians as
New- York, or pays thy better class of
them so well. Many make sufficient
money during the regular season of nine
months, from September to June, to ena
ble them to devote the summer to rest
and relaxation. Dozens of the leading
players go to Germany in tiie summer to
revisit their old homes, for the vast ma
jority of the professional musicians of
America aro German by birth. Native
born Americans have not as yet come to
look upon music as a means of liveli
hood. New York Tribune.
Sardines for KTcryhoily.
A recent story about tho disappearance
of tho sardine is said by reputable im
porters in this city to apply only to tho
poorer grades. These have been usually
packed for export. It is now said that
packers on the coast of I'riltany, France,
have secured some of the finest of these
delicate fish. More especially is this the
case at Etel, Concameau and St. Gilles.
One packer of Brittany has cured this
season 13,200 cases of 100 lioxes each,
which, on the average of fifteen sardines
to the Ikix, will make nearly 20,000,000
fish. The fish being large, well selected
and delicate, and packed in pure olive
oil, command a good price, as they have
no competitor of consequence in the
poorer grades. A portion of this catch
has already reached the United States. It
commands at retail forty cents a box for
the boneless sardine and thirty cents for
the plain. New York Mail and Express.
Advice to Amateur Naturalists.
To would be naturalists, Dr. Abbott
gives the following excellent advice:
"Avoid the highways when you take a
walk. Do not turn aside for a stretch of
Bwrfmp. If you have any fear of wet
feet, be properly shod before starting. It
too often happens that the sights best
worth seeing come to you when in a bit
of wet meadow. By very many, walks
are thought to be enjoyable only in what
is commonly called pleasant weather. If
I have seen something new, that day is
pleasant, however the thermometer re
gisters or the winds blow. In the noon
of midsummer days, it is proper to re
main in doors to rest, to keep cool, if
happily you can. Nature herself, just
then, is taking a nap." The Epoch.
Tlie respectable sum of 800,000 a year
is expended by the government of Cuba
for chemical analyses in cases of sus
Iected poisoning and all kinds of medico
legal investigations. Arkansaw Traveler.
In On!, r Ii. Rciliicc Stock. W(i(!i;i!l J'Imcooii our (Vnltr C nnlrr
a ('oinjdi to Line id
Children and Infants Musalin Under
wear Dress Cloaks, etc., etc..
his
Week
Childrcis White and Colored Dresses
at :!.ic. w rlh oOe.
Chihlrcns White and Colored Dress; s
at iir. worth from 7"ie to xl.
Clllldrens White an. I Colored Drr.es
at si, worth from s.."i0 to s.
Chiblrcns White and Colored Dresses
at si. .",(), worth from s-j to X'.'.'iO.
( 'hihlrcns AVhite and Colon il Dressi s
at s j, worth from s::..",(i to ::!.
Infants Robes at sl.r.O worlh s-.
"sl.i.l s;.."i,
" " " s' ". s-:;
Jllallts, Li.no; C!o:,ks, wm-tli &l
Chi Id rcirs Short Cloaks, worth
t A l l 7 y..
s ?!
mm m mm
WW
For the next .few weeks choice of lots in South Park may
be had for lo0. Purchaser may pay all in cash; or one
half cash, the other half in one year; or, one third cash, bal
ance in one and t wo years; or $y2 cash, remainder in month
ly installments of SlO; or, any one areein to construct a
residence worth iSCM and upwards "will he given a lot with- )
out liirtker consideration.
MOW TjKl
to select your residence lot s, even though you should not
contemplate building-;it (nice. One visit to South Park
will convince the most skeptical that it is the most desirable
residence locality in the city, and we will add, that the most
substantial class of buildings of which Platlsmouth can
boast for the year 18 ;, are now being constructed in this
h a n d s o m t addition.
iOillOl
-OF
IYSEY B1JSOBIPTI
around and through the entire tracl.
Any one desiring to canstruct a collage or a more preten
tious residence in South Park, can examine a large selection
of plans of the latest stylo of residences by cnH'intf at our
ollice. Air one desiring to examine property with a view
to purchasing, will Ik; driven to the park at. "our expense.
CALL ON
us in rs sri
3
John
F3 HAI?
fm we
to i;i:
am
" " $1.1 r, " !;-.:!.r,o
In f oils bong SKii ls at fiOc worth Toe.
' ir,c " $1.
" " " " '.;(: "
Infants bong Skirts at $1.10 worth
si.. Mi.
Infants bong Skirts at $.'2r, worth
1.7o.
Infants Robi s at worth $1.
" $:). '.M sf.f. no.
i?:i.ro
l
$(;.
."0 to si 5.00, imw 2.50 to 12.00.
front i to SlO, now 1.50 to S.
1 ??sa
PS "s
hllM
Only !
nn Ms fin
Tl! TTM
z2
Trees
MOST -
m n.
1L