The Nebraska independent. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1896-1902, July 27, 1899, Image 6

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    THE NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT.
July 27, 1899
fop tM aa a CbM Player.
It may not be known that Leo XI 11
la an ardent lover ol chess. He baa
been ft constant player tor over thirty
years, and bis skill In (bo cama. Is
anything but mediocre. Ilia holiness'
favorite opponent ued to be Father
Oulllo, with whom be waa in the babll
of playing when he waa Cardinal Pec
cl. On being raised to the pontifical
throne, he summoned Father Oulllo
from Florence, where ha waa then sta
tioned, and gave him apartments In the
Vatican, Father Oulllo waa said to
combine a rare mastty of the game
with an exceedingly Iraa- ule temper.
Sometime, 1 during a game with his
holiness, ! would burst out Into an
ungovpr-v'jle fit of rage, On aiich oc
cailona Loo XIII. Immediately Inter
rupted the content, and proceeded to
del!rnr a little homily on the virtue
of Christian ',reelgnatlon and self-con-troi,'
; $
flnorn Mario, of t'mpur.
The newest floor la m ' of paper,
and la of Carman importation, j The
paper Is Imported In a duafy, powdery
form, and Is then mlsed with a kind
ot cement which gives an) tance to the
Imralpable stuff, and a piaster Hk ap
pearancs. It I said that when tho,
floor Is laid, the absenra of Joint and
seams like those of the hard wood
Own la a dlatlnct Improvement and
without the Inconvenience of catching
dirt, The paste of which the floor is
com potted Is laid on and then rollij
out with heavy roller, apeclally
adapted for the purpose, lomethtng
like the atreet roller for asphalt, The
floor when smooth, hard and dry I ei
ther etalned or painted.
A Cycling Calealntloa.
An Itallau engineer baa calculated
that there must be by this time as
many as 10.000,000 cyclists In the
world. If only one-half of them were
to mount their machlnea on the same
, day, each traversing about twelve and
rittif miles, their combined Journeys
would represent a distance equal to
2,600 timea the circumference of the
unit. These startling figures help us
to form some Idea of the importance ol
the cycle as ft factor la modern civiliza
tion. , ' ' ; -
A Million In Umt Mlnit.
Evansvllle, I fid,, Oct. 12. Mrs, Maria
Cethet of this city baa received word
from England that she la heir to an
estate valued at $99,000,000, An at
tempt was made about two months ago
to poison Mrs, Bethel, some Strang')
man leaving ft cake of Ice at her bouse'
containing poison. Mra. IJeihel drank
some of the water In which the Ice
was placed and became deathly sick
Mrs, JJetbel tiaa employed a lawyer to
go to England to look afler her for
tuna. Her nart of the estate will
amount to about $1,000,000,
Took Tliraa,
Magistrate (sternly)yau're a pitia
ble specimen of humanity. What
brought you to all this degradation
and disgrace? Prisoner tproiilly)t
took three policemen, Tit-Hits,
Qatmt Mglitfilaf.
Last Saturday ft queer freak of light
ping occurred at Creston, W. Va, Four
men were playing poker on ft large
ro-k under a clitt during a eevere elec
trical storm, and suddenly lightning
truck the stone table,- hurling the
men for 'c,me distance, but not se
riously Injuring them, while the money
on he tablA was eriually divided and
thrown on either side of the rock,
- rtmf fuii,
The United HUles bus 7UG0 poslof
flees, with '195,720 employee, easily
leading all other nations In thane re
spects, Germany comes second on the
list with 37,60 postollces, and has
175,759 employes, , i
A STATE CAMPAIGN FUND
, Tbs State Central Committee, at It recent niietlng, aothorised tbs
Chairman nod Secretary of the Committee to open, through the column
ItbeNgBRAsg IwwitrBWPBNT, a popular subscription for raising fundi
for the coming campaign,
' In accordance with this action of the committee, blanks for such
snbacrlptlon, will appear la the paper each week, and additional pledges
will be sent to any who apply lor them. . ,' ;
The edocatlooal work not only of the coming campaign, but also that
of 1000, roust be vigorously pushed, and your committee should be en
abled to make an aggreealre fight, which can' only be done by baring the
necessary fund to push the work. . .
The Publisher 4 the Nkdimsra Inurpkypknt bare kindly undertaken
to receive all eubscriptioas that may be made and bold all pledgee for
tutors payments, publishing from time to time the list of contributor! to
to the fond. They will also publish receipts .from the chairman of the
Stat Committee, showing that all funds received bare been tamed over
to the Committee for purposes Intended.
Where It Is convenient to do so, clubs ran be formed and the remittance
be mads la the name of such club, of a number of Individuals cao send
ttelr subscriptions la one remittance. We hope for a generous response to
tbls appeal. This Is a campaign la the Interest of tbe people, and they -should
bold op tbs bands of their servants and lenders as they more along
lo tbe front rank.
. By order of tbe State Central Committee, Teoplea Independent Tarty
of Nebraska, , ; . J, n qaFFIN, Chairman.
' . 1 J.M.TIIOMP80S,8ocy.
NEBRASKA INDEPENDENT FUND,
FOR THE
PEOPLES PARTY STATE CEN. COMMITTEE
CASH SUBHCUll'TION.
The undersigned hereby subrcribes and pays Into the Nebraska Independ
ent State Fund for tbe use of tbe Peoples Party State Committee the sura of
nseeeaeeaeeewee es DOLLAUS.
DEFEItUEI) BDnaCIUI'TIOX.
I also agree to eend you for nso of said committee tbe sum of..
DOLLARS to be remitted not later than October 10, 1800.
..Signature
Date....
Postoffloe
Btreet No.
teeHeteteetteeeetse
County
efeiesseeeeeeseeeeMeetesee
Give tbe name, non de plume, or Initiate that the Nebraska Independent
may nee In crediting yon In Ite eoluma with your subscription.
taeewaaa)
Name for Credit
Make all remittances promptly to the Nebraska Independent, Lincoln.
Nebraska, and mall with this pM. Orgaalse clubs hrc ixwaibl ao
Inolud eeveral euWnptlona in ou remittauee.
Tfce M't'tiewkb VeeisHil IWa llertMtr a aijUbW Ua4tag .
aa M ImmuI ea be rti m Mwet4 !' la, 1 km U a i-u
ae4 t'iaiv kiM k(tt iMttel it lu mn Ikie mai U a ril.ff
Ure. w asrevtf ea wars Me Im4s la ise me Ike M'-i w aihi IVia
i-aWr ss iWm twUjr.
, , Dairy Not.
It takes a good deal of stamina for
a butter or cheese maker to refuse the
milk that Is brought to him when, he
knows that It Is only just enough off
to warr .t its refusal. In many cases
the man Is working at a small salary
and cannot afford to lose bis place. He
therefore accepts the poor milk, hop
ing that by skill he may be able to
overcome the harmful flavors produced
by mallferoue bacteria. But try as be
will be cannot make butter and cheese
that will atand the test of time and
remain good. It should therefore be
a point with the patrons to encourage
tho man at the factory to reject all
poor milk. They are getting the right
spirit In New Zealand, where they are
beginning to pay tbe buttermaker for
an m ilk rejected. This makes him
feel that the patrons are blnd blm
ana that bis salary does not depend
on bis receiving milk that Is so poor
in navor that It will Injure the make
or tho entire factory,
They are trying to form a mil ktriist
in the city of Washington, but ws un
oerstand that no great headway has
ss yet been made. An attemnt was
maas to Impress tbe consumer with
the Idea that said trust would riva
them better and cheaper ir!k. The
people evidently t bought they would
not be too credulous in the matter.
All trust are formed with tl.e ftvwed
Intention of benenttlna: thi nonnt nv
PP they without doubt mean
me noiders of the stock-til! such time
ss tuey can work tbe bond echeme and
freeze out the stockholder. Th f.
feet of most milk trust Is to Increase
the price to the consumer and decrease
the price the producer of th miii r-
ceives. The manlnulators nt irut
miena to nave a profit at both ends.
see
rasieumiitlon of milk and milk
proauci snouid he followed to ft fur
greater extent than at present. The
iaci mat dairy product are so lareclv
cunsnuicq, ana mat they are very good
v.rrr. m aigease gerpis, make It Im
prure inai every safeguard should
ne inrown around them. Not oniv sra
the lives of healthy people In tho
nana of the dairymen to aome etnt.
but to ft very large extent tbe lives of
mvan.j ana children. It is not n.
slble for us to know how many people
have been slain by diseases carried In
milk, but what we do know nt
glons thus produced convinces us that
tho entire number must be great. The
simpie work of pasteurizing make all
sare,
THE DANGEROUS CLASSES.
Hottlad Milk,
I bavs found that thers Is less ex
pense and trouble In vlellverlng milk In
bottles than by dipping it-from a can.
oouiea mnic commands a better
price, say a contributor to Itural New
Yorker. As the bottle bold Just one
quart, there la no over dip. Milk
dipped from a can aeems to loss from
four to five quarts for sverr 40-onart
csn. Ws used to deliver 440 quarts of
Domeq muic dally, besides several 40
quart cans of dipped milk, and alway
found the bottle tbe most fconomlcal
way to deliver. Our bottle bill aver
sged 30 gross of bottles per year, at
$9.60 per gross, which amounted to
$285, or a loss of 4,320 bottles a year.
Suppose ws deliver the 440 quarts, or
U 40-quart can of milk by dipping It
from tho can, and overdlp or lose four
quarts of milk for each 40-quart can,
there would be a loss of 44 quarts of
milk on the It cans dally, which, at
seven cents per quart to the retailer.
means $3.08 per day. or $1,121,20 per
ynar. uecillCl from tills thtt oss nn W.
ties, $285, whch leaves a balance of
s.sa.ju in ravor of the retail doaler
who uses bottlea. There Is even a
larger balance than his In his favor,
because he geta eight cents per quart
for his bottled milk, and bla customers
like It better because of the bottles;
the cream ahowa up better, the milk
Iooka richer, and is much cleaner and
handler, both for the customer and
dealer.
Cheese Spoiled In Curing. Many a
well-made cheeue la spoiled In the cur
ing room. Too many maken pay too
little attention to the curing of their
cheese. Much of the succese la at
tributable to proper care of tbe cheese
after reaching tbe curing room. Shelves
should be kept Hesu and should be
IM and level and not warped out of
shape, A uniform temperature la de
sirable, and the maker who allows the
temperature of the curing room to
vary from 40 to 10 degree will never
Miffred Jn turning out a fin flavored
cheese. A stove or some artltli tl heat
U ntdful U the ruriug room, even In
hot weather. Meaty of so called .
bow grease I also an essential to fine
ipprarliig and rlean. bright chi-M,
rt.
titbit, mttu, ftiviiuj Nutimx
Cnnnerttcnt t'attle - t'attls Commis
sioner Kpraan has rendi-m) hi '
port (r the year ending Drptfrubtr 39
Ut. Tle general bealid a4 eondl
lion of dairy rattW U very amid. Out
f lll.m'd mllrh rots and 7.tnm ether
rattle only 11 were roadvinn!; all but
I of thrae bad tuterciilol4, fhe In.
borruila lest for dlellag h dtt
bat Ma vallrly dirarl4 v th
at. ""Oirr dlrn.a," ta e,iWmit.
sioner ttntai kd, "are Inuilisesi,
study tktlr biMla IkoMMikty, are
gftraUf willtag t,i h IKsIr sr.
U tttivit, a4 to uwiiff m (ut,
Mtixs a vr4 aUkia, ar
biliary ead SHUiioa.''
haver '.v e-tf ft? iHUr,
ff Ml A Hi MMt4
AvsMfti. II. J tiff K(Were !!
, k UrtMt aa4 UHAta
c kU(4 ImI eveaiiif la the IMt
ttty eala. by a ifaattt etBiiiM
Ve lM4lng a M til t the eslaea,
M Mti aai tuaa, nh-M
aawe t a4 t biMtwa, era attlv
Vatr4
oaa Good Ad vie Olrei Rich Mca'a
Soas oa Leaving Collear. '
Tbla Is the scanon for good advice to
college graduates. To have really tbe
beat effect, however,' the advlco ought
to be addrosHod to tbe young men
about four years before thoy gradu
ate, and It ought to Includa tbeir pro
fessors and parents.
It Is generally admitted that the
J Kvnru ((iiiiriiiii.ruiir nililri'na dllatps
upon evils In public life and calls upon
the young warriors Just going Into tho
world equipped lo tho pauoply of tho
higher leuriilng to tight manfully
against these threatenfrfg ilia. Houses
anil political heelers are generally
specified as tho enemies of society
against whom the coilego graduates
aro expected to tnko anus, and there
are frequent exhortations to lay aside
tho fastidiousness of culture and "at
tend the primaries" to do battle for
good government.
This Is well as far as It goes, but it
does not strike at theeal root of tho
evil. The act uul situation may be
made clear by a bit of catechism:
What aro the most "duugorous
classes" iu American society 7
Those responsible for tbe worst evils
that nflllct our people.
What Is one of our worst evils?
Corrupt government.
Who are responsible for corrupt government?
The men who bavs tuouey to spend
la buying favors.
What classes bavs money to spend
In this way?
The financially successful classes,
whoso young men all go to collego,
Agnlust whom, then, should collego
graduate bo particularly warned?
Themselves.
It Is a pathetic spectacle of well
meant futility to see rich and educated
young men pottering about tho prima
ries la a helpless effort to keep their
own political tools from selling out to
themselves,
Let these principles be Impressed
upon every student, not only upon bis
graduation, but all through bis collego
course and la vacation times at home:
If, you aro going to bo a lawyer,
don't put your conscience at the dis
posal of any rich Individual or cor
poration that can offer you a good fee
to Invent methods of defrauding the
public,
If you are a director In a railroad
company, dou't go to a meeting of
your good government club to protest
against betrayals of , tho peoplo by
boodle officials whllo your agents are
hiring those snrne officials to commit
the crimes you denounce.
If tho so called "good citizens" did
not debauch our government, It would
not be debauched, for they are tho
men who have the money, to puy for
corruption. .
This Is the moral lesson that needs
to bo taught In our colleges, not how
tho poor Utile rascals that do political
work on street corners and la saloons
cao be kept from yielding to tempta
tlon, but how the rich and powerful
and well educated can restrain them
selves from putting temptation In their
way. Let the good citizens" reform
themselves, and the had citizens will
have to become good from lack of any
inducement to ho otherwise.
Many of the present enemies of tho
common won Itli are "self nuulo men,"
who havo accumulated their riches
without the advantago of a college ed
ucation, but they all send their sonS to
college. Perhaps, If their Instructors
do their duty, tho new generation may
be moro scrupulous than the old, and
wealth In Its hand may be a blessing
Instead of a menace to the state.
Why not cultivate the Imaginations
of tho ardent young men whoso char
acter aro ready to take tho Impress of
the mold? Let them realize tho baso
ness of living as pernicious parasites
on society, taking everything and glv-
Ing nothing, destroying tho vitality of
the social organism that supports
them, and, like tho Son Joso scale,
good for nothing but to be scrubbed
off with whalo oil soap.
Develop ambition, The man who
makes himself truly great necessarily
does good to others. The ono who ac
cumulates millions without doing good
to others makes a pitiful failure of his
life. The college graduate wants suc
cess. There Is only one way to get It
ami that the honest and uuselfish way.
-8. II MoiTett in New York Journal
TREATY IS SIGNED,
Plrnltr ual WUH rraaea Com'
lul4 Tudr.
Waauuioro, Ju;y SA The long
pending reciprocity trsaty negotia
tion Utwet'U tha I'ntU'd Stat and
traaoe were algued ytrdy. The
coiicomIuu grantod by t'rme em
braiMd Hut uf th mIIdIm In what ta
known at l' trettelt ml 11 lot ma tariff.
Thla euiuprooil lit ha.W, the rate
bcla v a evv tout fti pwr rnt
tUw ).Mti ta h genrat tariff of
t'rano it wat fun4 aeeeaaary,
hawvT, owluf ta rutl (rent
tttt agrartas) tairtt ta tawpt
fraia thl mUaI mum iUt eUmi twenty
fakir artls , vMctt agrk'uttaral
dituia.
Iraace eur liupurlattt eMt-
aU.aa oa evsr lint t th ehit prwdtttiu
sent y rraeesi ta tM Hlry.
The treaty will rwtl l pUeing the
prw.U(a t the 1'aittwU Kutat h the
Mtt Vat 1 la IrikM aMo4ati
Uevat tWtUta a4 tlriuy. At pra-
(Um sanatrl k Ue tntttiittttMt
wita fw atwplioaa bate M4 ta f.
satuiiM tale,
AMERICAN FARMERS.
Ceacral I?. C. Howard Tells tha Buf
falo Conference Aboal Them,
General B. C. Howard, editor of
Farm, Field and Fireside, of Chicago
spoke before the recent conference of
social and political reformers at Buf
falo on "Tho American Farmer." In
the course of bis address be said:
"I am not here to plead for any public
policy which shall favor ogrlculturo to
the. Injury of any other business. Tbe
farmers of our country bnve come In
for some pretty bard unmes of lato. At
some of these, such as 'hayseeds,1
'horny handed sons of toil,' etc., they
can afford to smile good naturedly. At
others, like the 'man of the muck rake,'
or 'tho luuo with tbe, hoc,' they are
thoughtful . Does the occupation of
agriculture necessarily tend to de
grade? ; ."'
"Georgo Washington was first and
Inst an agriculturist. Abraham Lin
coin, James A. Garfield aud many oth
ers uiHiiuguiHiied in peace and war
were at Byrne time In their Jives farm
ers, and, like 'Antaeus, took an Irre
prcsslhle start upward from a touch
of the soil. .
"And yet some of our farmers crlug
cf Inwardly, when lately they looked
upon Millet's The Man With the
IIoo This Is not my likeness. It Is
not a picture of my boy. Is It to bo a
portrait of my son's son?
"A thing that grluvus not aud that never
uuprn,
Btolld snd stannod, a brother to the ox.
"It not our occupation, do It condi
tions mean this for thoso who come
after us? Must the descendant of tbe
American fartuer revert to tho 12uro
peun peasant typo?
"Bowed by the wolfdit uf centurion, he lan
Uuuu his hou anil yuu upon tliu xroond,
Tli tmiptliii!n of i,' In his fiiw,
And oa his Uwk tiie tmrdon ot tha world.
,,
"There Is no shaiw more torrlbla than this,
Mure tonguoil with corumra of tb wurld's
Mind giond.
"Our farmers' sons find that tbe old
farm Is depreciating every year; the
Income from It uro diminishing; there
Is not enough for ail; the sous and
daughters cannot be sent away to
school or to college, as was the trnc
tlce 24 yeurs ago, when I left homo on
the New Kugluiid farm for my four
years' course of study, Tbe boys and
also tho girls seek employment In tho
clues.
"Tbls Is not Kuropean life, one may
say. Yes, but It Is the history of many
a boy who has been forced from the
farm by Its bard conditions during the
past 0 or 7 years-nay, for 25 years
past These sons of the farmer are
looking down. Their faces are toward
tho ground." . ,
Tho speaker gave some startling
comparative figures regarding Incomes
and said that the agricultural popula
tion of tho United Ktatos Is compelled,
under present conditions, to live on on
Income below that provided for pau
pers, and receive less for their labor
than Is paid for convicts.
"This is but a single specimen fact,"
continued General Howard. "It can be
multiplied from almost every class of
industry. Thousands are tramps and
beggars today. We know It. For my
part, I cannot Ignore facts and figures.
They mean not starvation alone, they
mean tho wrecking of homes, tho
breaking up of families, tbe crushing
out of bright hopes of youth, the shat
tering of faith. " They mean tho poor
houso to the ski and aged. They mean
tears and untold sorrow. They mean
the breaking of hearts. They mean
despondency. despair and sulcldo. Tbey
mean crime.
"Kut this Is not Christian. Some of
my' brethren of the church may any,
'Theso are the necessities of life, and
they should bo meekly borne and de
velop patience.' Here we tnko Issue.
It la not an Inevitable and cruel neces
sity that pauperizes tbe American
farmer and degrades bla children and
enkindles In bis heart too, often tbe
spirit of retaliation and revenge. The
economic or financial system of our
country Is somehow wrong when 01
per cent of the families own 20 per
cent of the wealth and 0 per cent of
tbe families own about 71 per cent of
the wealth.
"Until some remedy Is suggested for
tho evil or falling prices, and until the
rich cense to Ut'ome richer and the
poor poorer, how are we to bring any
good cheer to the farmer? But there
Is a brighter ldo. Wyckoff found no
happier Kit In all bis travels thnu on
the Mltiiii'noin farm. Tbe family and
the neighborhood life vrcrt? Idyllle.
These bard statistics are averages and
tell of a terrible depression mid a
wrong to I righted.
"On the other hand, It would be al
most InipoHcitile to make anarchist
out of American farmer. Tbey love
their etuiuiry. In the civil war and In
the but war the best recruiting
ground wi-rw lo the great agricultural
tat. In peaca they are Industrious:
In war they an patrloihs They ar
the grvat runaervatlve and prvaerva
live element In social life, la ptdttlea
Tbey will atand by tbe Pre putdle
tool, the uttcurruptwl ballot bos, and
will at eat!! adopt rath aoNisurea.'
HYPNOTISM
Why not learn
, how to hypno
tize and con
trol when yon
wisb; gain tbe
undying , love
, and friendship
of any one you
choose? It
makes fun for boors at a time; It pleases
t be old and tbe young. Large Illustrat
ed lessons and full particulars for 10c.
Address all orders to I'UOF, U E. WIL-
HON, Lock Box 013, Lincoln, Nebraska.
T. A. CAROTH ERS
I
ICE-E
Datlvarad to any part ol
tha City. , ' i :
TKL1DPIIONE 4 7eD
OR. M. H. KKTCAUm.
SPECIALIST. ;
eye; EAR. nose, throat;
CATARRH.
Spectacle's Fitted Accurately.
aii rees Keasonaoie.
fflce 226 S, 10th St',, Lincoln, Netr.
BEE KEEPER';
. SUPPLIES.
Ttf . L I
'o send for our 1M99 (7ata
K.iue. TItEHTEK BOP-
l nH rt. 11th Hi., Lincoln, Neb.
iforlJ
DR. O.C. REYNOLDS,
SURGEON.
Roous.17,18, W, Burr ii---i.fB.ik
JUL Jfhoaas 50 668. LllfbUlll.iilChl
Headouarters for Good Lumber
at low prices.
f.w;
rvw B I I I A I
m
JjJjj sw 111 is a. 1 k vvi
7th&OSt,LIOCOLN,NEB.
Dro rn
in 11 1. 11
t'a tHtk la kt
lM4kiNtt, ty ft Ta riMU
gaf'llMg1 a JpM t bin ailUaMs
wlfti awaa praUiall m
ht Mie tlia. a aM4
Call fveat aa4 are MMatad gr
itosseat la kaw'sa rv
Wilt 4a4 Ml MIm
I'ass, I a, July U -Tha lawU
ritln was eickMd Ua yaftarday. it
U tTaidal IVawvUa lalaU t
1U1 lua hi atkaa aa I MlalHa laler
( ta la, U4Qaitly, eaia-m
thai, Mftdte prAt wm4Uiw gk
U of the Wi4 wut sjilaar' awaalt
Wuui4 prov a grair ! U bise
tkaa aVa.laaiMal at hi ai4
au4 l ! I,
Maw Ya 4 i'y U-rMtea Magta,
trl Jaewti laf l likly a 01.
fg4 frM aluly tb lwty
aaa rral4 le l a l4 4a
atite ta blow ap kV't4
rHeia4 IUI1 at I'lflli
a 4 t'atrtfalita trt last w
A chance
to save
some money
by dropping me a
postal card,
asking ior
Catalogue and Prices.
Good standard new Orcan
$45 and up.
ARTHUR BETZ. 212 So. (1th Si
Lincoln, Nebraska.
The Pittsburg Fa,. Excursion,
$26.50 for Bound Trip,
Here's another cheap rate eaat by the
Northwestern line, U0 f) to l'ittburs
and return. Ttekete sold Jnlv.11nnd
AuKnstl, Final limit Ananst 31. Call
lor tickets at eity otlloe, lWaootli 10th
street.
Annual Encampment 0. A, R. at
Philadolphia-Low Rates
8top-0?er8,
Here la a popular ricuraioa for yoa by
the North westera Line, 1'rstty nearly
verytblsa; yoa want graaleU.
For the rouad trip mum Mt going
and rvtaralog, coatinuou laMave,
.VJ HAi going and Mturnlea; asm roeta
nh rDio over la ( Utrvtitra
l Huftalo, Niagara t'lla or t'ttUburtr,
llttm; gtMsg u way sad rvturuiaa;
antW, alia on atuo.oe a aliuva,
1rtu. TWfcfi wilts ai.Kt rWttntr
I. 'J, and .1, Kitrvaia limit Hiluibr
9i. t'f iae tatuf niallva rail
wiv tkl.t Dftl. It? Mo, loth Kk.
I,lartlaa Nb.
r a t asiiruss
la lb lurt ml UMMit VU .
'M
I im Mit Ik aih l SW SarMV
T MitMi ai SM
laMb. tMMtt, lkl m w ftl
Ik" IWHll Swm la ! Mi I
I vi,, tk i. 4. l aa 4
' w Ik 11 ml Hn. IMS lit taMM
i IHM l 4 Mkik mi'S
M (''. .4wl ! -.. 1 k
! Hmii.4 Km IM
m4 tl U mih tnum Ik U.
4 a.. iMMt, 4 It . iwm, a4 Ik ! Hat
Hv4 t. I. f "I MX Im4 )
ik i wl k Ik, la
ti tl Ik' w...4,. k u.4,.4 fk'Ht4
kHIatllwwl.Hl ft a
4i,a ..,i akknt i ta
Nnwa Im4 l at tati uk..JI
V ikw U . f . i.
S V. lMa.
r rw, fkw,