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About The Nebraska independent. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1896-1902 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1899)
, , y MDE COlsrSOXjIDA-TIOT OF TEP WEALTHMAKEES : .A-STD TX-IZ3 LITCOLlSr ISTX523 vol. xi. ' LINCOLN, NEBRASKA, SEPTEMBER 21, 1899.' ; A- . t I' ' . 1 . ' . ' . ,.. , " ' ' " 1EBBASKA F NOV 1 JQLJllo 5L V. T BURNED OUT The Nebraska Independent Loses Every thing in the Great Lincoln Fire Saturday Morning, v Last Saturday morning the most disastrous fire in the history of Lin coin occurred. The Nebraska In dependent lost everything except the contents of the safe in which were most of the account books and the subscription list. All the files of the paper, all the letters from its foundation to the present time, went tip in smoke. The editor's personal loss, while it was not much in dollars and cents, is very trying to him. On the northeast corner of M and 11th streets was located the printing es tablishments of all the reform forces and the Western Newspaper Union There were a great many printing presses, large stocks of paper, many books, some finished and some in course of publication. Many him dred people in one way and another were damaged by the fire. ; The principle building was the property of Jacob North & Co. He had just been carried to his grave when the fire occurred. -Besides this building the Masonic Temple in which was the city library, and the great St. Paul V Methodist Epis copal church were burned. There was nothing of value saved from any of the ubildings. In all . cases it was an almost total loss, ' A few chairs or things of that sorfc only, were taken put of the buildings. No man in, the city will say that even after the fire was started that this awful loss was necessary., The church was a 6tone building with a slate roof and was more than '' 20 feet from the North buildinz in which the fire originated.. The to tal loss is more than a quarter of a million dollars on winch there was r -Insurance of $122,450J There Wis no insurance on the plant of the Nebraska Independent ,; J i Why was this fire allowed to spread from building to building? There can be but one answef. An inefficient fire department. The pco j)lepf Lincoln pay enough and more than enough to sustain a department that is first-class in every respect But the department in Lincoln is still in the control of the old repub- lican ring and is run just as the state house was run until the reform forces kicked the thieves out of there. Ihe infernal , rottenness of the Lincoln city government, every em ploye in its service being first a re publican worker and after that a servant of the pepole, is in the'inain the cause of this severe loss. From the chief of the fire department, whose appointment was secured be cause he was a republican and not because he was an expert in fire ser vice, clear down to the common la borer, appointments are ma'de, not because of qualification to fill the position, but because of a politi cal pull. If the most expert fire fighter in the United States should apply for the position of chief in Lincoln, he'conld not get the place tinder the present cjty government unless he was a political worker in the republican party. Treasuries raided, cities burned, banks roTbbed by their officers, inefficiency, cor- , ruption, has been the record if the ' republican party in this state for many years. It is still so wherever that party is in power. The people reap just what they have sown. How lonk will the people of this city con tinue to sow republican votes and reap corruption? 0 THK CAMPAIGN. There is a ampaign carried on un der the ijpcrvision of the state chairman and his assistants at the .populists headquarter such as we Biave not bad since 1800. , .There is this difference between this year and last year. last year the populists , were bo cock suro that they would ; carry the state after the magnificent showing made by the state officers that they did not take the initiative out in the country. districts. The state committee arranged for meet ings and sent word to the counties telling the chairman there " of the date and asking him. to make ar rangements. It is different this year. A)l over the state they are calling for speakers and Mr. Edmis ten has his hands full to supply them. Every county and, every pre cinct in the state is being looked af ter. The chairman has been col lecting the names of earnest popu lists for over two years and there is not a voting precinct in the state where he has not the name of some man who is interested in the reform cause. The correspondence at the populist headquarters is immense, many times larger than it ever was in any campaign before. s Accessions to the ranks ares being reported from all parts of the state. There is an uneasiness among old time republicans everywhere. They do not ake to the denunciations of the Declaration of Independence. They have no heart in this McKin ley war. They feaf militarism. It seems to them that the very founda tions are slipping from under their feet. The constant fall in the price of wheat and the rise of everything that is sold makes the fanners - in the republican ranks begin to ask with an earnestness that they never exhibited before what all this means They: don't like the war. ; They don't like the rise in she price of everything that they have to buy and the falling price of most of the things they have to sell. So they begin to doubt whether the gold standard is the right thing. That means' that many of them will for sake the - republican party in the next .ejection, ' They "; are all being looked after fry" the 6tate committee. THE JOURNAL'S VILENESS. Because a Soldier will not Talk Imperialism it Prints the Vilest Slanders About Him. "This," wrote the Honorable Geo. D. Meikeljohn to a friend in Lincoln early in May, 1898, "this is to be a republican war as far as it is in our power to make it. Except where we can avoid it, none but repub licans will be commissioned as offi cers in the army." The policy which has undoubtedly been carried out as fully as possible, is widely differ ent from the one pursued by Gov. Ilolcomb and later by Gov. Poynter. both of whom laid aside partisan ship and appointed the bitterest and most uncompromising republicans to high po'silions in the Nebraska volunteers. Not only has the national admin istration made desperate endeavors to make it a republican war so far as officers are concerned, but the most damnable practices are resorted to to blacken the reputation of any officer or man who has the courage to have opinions at variance with the administration. Col. Funston was a demi-god until it was discovered hat ho does not believe in ''benevo lent assimmilation;" now all. 'sorts of scandalous stories are told about him in order to dim the brilliant record ho has made. . J ut. Col. Eager did his duty a .i American stories about the wound he received in twenty-one engagements, somo of them pretty sharp battles, and escaped unhurt. In the twenty-second battle he Mas wounded by a Mauser bullet passing through the top of his foot and out at the sole. He lays no claim to having perform ed any miraculous achievements, but he does claim that the army records will show for themselves that he did his whole duty as a soldier and officer- ' Col. Eager is a populist. He does not believe in "benevolent assimi lation" it seems too much like murder. Hence, it is no wonder j that a lot of Miss Nancys who were too cowardly to enlist and go to war, are now circulating maliciously false stoories about the wound he received in the foot. Too cowardly to make a plain statement, they hedge and turn, trying to create the impression that Col. Eager' wound was self inflicted. Such a libel is easily an swered, if indeed it should be an swered other than by a swift unerr ing kick of a number ten boot, by the plain statement that Col. Eager was in twenty-one battles before he was wounded., It is passing strange that a man should face death on twenty-one occasions and show the white feather in the twenty-second.;- None but republicans need apply. If Col. Eager were a republican or even if he should pay turn coat and swallow the imperialistic pill he wouldbe lauded' to the skies. But because he has a mind of his own, the shafts of venom are aimed at him. No populist or dem ocratic paper has assailed the rep il lation of any republican officer or man in the Nebraska volunteers have republicans lost all sense of dc-cency?-Nebraska Post. : MAN BEHIND THE PLOW. There's been a lot to say about the man behind the gun, . And folks has praised him highly for the noble work he done; He won a lot of honor fer the land where men are free, It was him that 6ent the Spaniards kitin' back across the sea; But he's had his day of glory, had his little spree, and now ' There's another to be mentioned he's the man behind the plow. A battleship's a wonder and an ar my's mighty grand, And warrin s a pcrfessidn only he roes understand; . -There's soniethin' sort V thrillin' in a flag that's wavln' high, And jt makes you want to holler r .when the- boys go-marchirr! -Try,01 But when the shoutin's over and the fightin's done, somehow, We find we're etill dependin' on the man behind the plow. They sing- about the glories of the man behind the gun, And the books are full of stories of the wonders he has done; The world has been made over bv the fearless ones who fight; Lands that used to be in darkness they have opened to the light; When God's children snarl the sol dier has to settle up the row. And folks haven't time fer think in' of the man behind the plow. In all the pomp and splendor of an army on parade. And all through the awful darkness that the smoke of battle's made; In the halls where jewels glitter and where shoutin' men debate, In the palaces where rulers deal ; out honors of the great, There is not a single person who'd ? be doin' bizness now Or have medals if it wasn't fer the man behind the plow. We're a-buildin' mighty cities and we're gainin' lofty heights, We're a-winnin' lots of glory and we're settin' thinsrs to rights; We're a-showin' all creation how Future men'll gaze iii wonder at the things that we have done, And they'll overlook the feller, jist the same as we do now, Who's the whole concern's founda tion that's the man behind the the world's affairs should run, plow. 0 When congress meets its first duty should be to knock the props from under this army, illegally organized to fight an un-American and unau thorized war. All further enlist ments should bo stopped,' estimates should be cut down, appropriation should be witheld promotions should he deniedand every possible thing done to weaken and reduce the ar my. Ten thousand men, or even five thousand, are enough for the regular army of a republic. No re public can endure that tolerates the demoralizing and debasing influen ces of a large standing army. En courage the state militia, but foster the regular army only as you would a dangerous serpent that is, pull out its fangs and crush its head. No republic needs an army when every citizen is a soldier and ready to die for his country and his home, Val ley Democrat. j News of the Week The point of interest in the Uni ted States for most of the ,', people during the week was the trust con ference at Chicago." Almost as soon as it assembled it tvas clearly to be seen that plutocracy had nt nog, lected the occasion by any means, and the delegates lined up. on two sides for battle. It was trust under cover and anti-trust; -openly. Treasurer Foster, he wha frp t order ed the payment of gold from ' the treasury for the government obliga tions and shortly failed in business most disastrously, ias airon'tspokcn champion of trusfs. Tliea jcamc Bourke Cochran,- the Cleveland gold bug champion of 1893. 11$ fought under cover. . Ills speech, while os tensibly against trusts was the most powerful defense of the system yet made, He put just enough jBOund economics into his speech to make it go. ,;: - . . His speech in the house in 181)3 did not show the slightest knowl edge of the science of political econ omy, but this speech does. ; He has been reading John Stuart Mill and this speech shows him to be dis honest while tho former only con victed him of ignorance. In 1873 he thought taxes were badges of lib erty and the more of such badges a man had on him the happier V he would be. Now he says that trusts are not altogether good but pub licity of air their proceedings would be a perfect remedy and that is all that the bjw need to provide for. The law provides for that now arid always has provided for it." But the trusts continue to - increase in i power. Bourke Cochran's speech was per haps the most finished piece nf sus tained sophistry thatcatj , l'efouad in liiTEnglish language." 'T''"-"rT? As for the audiences, the place of meeting was overflowing with people at all the meetings. The sentiment generally :, was ; against monopolies of all kinds. Mr. Bryan made an exhaustive discussion of the subject of trusts which will be printed in full in the Independent. The situation in the " Transvaal still remains critical. . A diligent search of both foreign and Ameri can papers leads the Independent to believe that England is engaged in a scheme- of robbery and bloodshed and that without thejeat excuse. Whenever the Boer government has agreed to a demand by Joe Cham berlain, instead of settling the dis pute he has followed with new and more presumptious demands, until at last his scheme of conquest is wholly unmasked. : He means to annex the Boer republic and nothing else will satisfy him. Of course, like McKinley, he is going to do it in the name of humanity and civil ization. The Independent believes that England is again engaged in one of her old schemes of inhuman robbery and conquest. Nothing will stop her but bullets. She will have to stand a shower of them be fore she kills all of the brave, God fearing farmers of this African re public. The Dreyfus incident has finally closed with a full pardon. It now begins to look as if the last trial was a fake from beginning to end. Without doubt the whole matter was arranged before hand and the officers conioing the court-martial were ordered What to do, and did exactly what had been ararnged for them to do, when they were detailed upon the court-martial. The gen erals who had committed perjury time and again to save the "honor" of the annv had to be given a chance to escape their just punishment and this was the way taken to do it. No more reports can bo found in any of the great dailies, as to .the number of eiilistmentes in the army. How near McKinley is coming to getting the 33,000 recruits to go and subjugate the Filipinos no one can tell, but the advertisements, for re cruits are everywhere to b Peen stuck up on the dead walls and bill boards of the cities. Lincoln has had on her gayest clothes all tho week on account of the free street fair which Is proving a great, success. The streets ' are crowded from early morn until late at night with visiting thousands.. There are blocks upon blocks of gaily decorated booths in which all sorts of things fanciful and" Useful are exposed for sale. "All kinds of exhibits and more profuse in num ber than aro seen at the old fashion fairs. ' . ' ' DARE NOT, TRUST THEM. ,, Editor Independent; While at tending the. G. A. 11. vaunual reu nion at Lincoln we felt proud of the magnificent reception the warm hearted people, regardless of politi cal preferences, were able to give the noble men of the First Nebraska They deserve greater praise than we can give them for their unflinching obedience to orders, for they were braver than we of the army of '61, because we were fighting to save our own country from dismember nicnt, while they felt that they were fighting to subdue an inoll'ensivc people on the opposite side of the globe;- ' ' ' -. ,: '.;..'.; When it came to speech-making, however, those in charge seemed to assume an entirely different attitude and many a blunderbuss was let off in adulation of our "glorious cause" in ihe Philippines while the boys who had been there were not trusted with an invitation to say a ' word, notwithstanding many of them qould have given us a very instruct ive talk regarding the situation there, and we were pained' ta4icaf fuch words at "traitor and copper head'' applied to citizens who sjoke much more mildly of this wretched Philippine business than would many of the returned soldiers had they been given an opportunity. There was enough incongruity in this whole affair to make it ludicrous had it not included so much of tho really pathetic. The First Nebraska boys were net cuckoos therefore they , 'wcro not allowed to speak. , ' ' B. ROOSA, Co. E, 3rd Minn, of 'il. Lincoln, Neb. . " . . , , o "' ; ' ; HOW A BULLET TRAVELS. the SolflUr la Tanght la) Learning How to Shnot. The soldier is taught that the ballet travels through tho air in a curved hue called tbe trajectory, and that three forces act tipon it first, the exploded charge, tending; to drive it forward in a straight Una along the line of fire; ecofld, the force of gravity, and, third, the air resistance. At 200 yards, owing to thexe forces, the ballot, traveling at the rata f, 2,000 feet second, will have fallet, - hont two feet. In the ex citement of Wing at close quarters tho aim will invariubly be too high. . It has been enlcnlnted that whtn tbe enemy approaches within 3."0 yards the soldiers will instinctively firo ts nmeh as two fi-et or three feet above their heads. Now, it has been found by ex periment that the fact of firing bay oneti will catuo the ballot to drop a distance of abont i feet in 850 yards, and therefore when about this dietanee from the enemy soldiers ore intruded to fix bayonet, in order to connteract the excessive elevation of their aim. The recruit learns that tbe mean ex treme range of tho bullet is 3, S00 yards, and that the longest shot ever-observed Was 8,760 yards. He is taught the pene trating power of his weapon, a subject full of interest. To take one or two ex amples, rammed earth ftives lssa pro tection than loose; bullets easily find their way through joints of walls, while a concentrated ere of about ISO round at 200 yards will breach a nine inch brick wall Only experience can teach a soldier how much, he must aim to the right or left of hie mark to counteract the force of the wind. A side wind has more effect on tbe flight of the bullet than a wind blowing directly toward the firer. The soldier must learn the habits of hia rifle, since some shoot higher or lower than othera Every riQe, like every marksman, has its own individuality. Peureou'a Weekly. 'j lad to iodki., She What did papa aay t Be 1 asked his consent to our mar rUrfe by telephone, and he replied. "I don't know who yon are, but it'a all right. Boaton Traveler. f .. . to wttdtHKKitiwititititit I NOT Ff PIIII I An Autlj Gets an Inspiration 5 aa Unexpected 3 Source. '"What a m !" repeated the man to most a writhe, "Making himself with 1 bricks with straw all the year -there. I wish to Ood d how to write!" 1 pnld blm In solid coin, his minor dreams was round. I wib1 I'd never loan- And yet it so far. One t realized; the window of bis writing room overlooked a suburban roadway along which jarring wheels seldom rattled; be I id got away from tbe Whir and droi e of the town, where his nerves had b en at a tension all day long. He coulil compoNe tu peace. And yet be sat w (b tbe bitter; Idle stare, Clutching a di pen. Tbe door txUlml creaked; a woman glided In on tjptoe. "Don't start-it's euly I." she wjkispered, 'Dou't start" He threw down tbe pen 'without timing. "If all statts or the strain pf expecting them. I'm sick of It. I tol you-slck of It nil." "What Is the! matter?" Stie bad paus ed half way,) with bands together. "Can't you writer "Write! I'vd nothing to write. I'm drained dry. And I promised a tragic story"-wlth i half "sneerVfor that Society Sun. Tragic! What's the time?"--.'. T . . "It must be oearly 6.M - "BIxT Dark In another hour dusk now! I've done nothing. And you you nerer attempt la belp me, by so much as a word!" - j "Never help jroi'T she echoed; and repeated It to fcArself. 'I never help aim! But when hove you asked such a thing? What good would be my Ideas?" ("Oh. not mncli Women seldom have real Ideas. They're flitting superficiali ties. Rtiir- t ' .-.'-" 'A long slleno. The door creaked again, but lie knew she had only closed It and was stilt hovering behind him. He was somewhat surprised, but would not turn, - vaguely conscious of the sneer bollowmfis. Then I never help1 yon." she repeated ealmVy. VWouUj you like ma to try? rerbnps something has just come Into my mind. It la silly, maybe, as 1 tell W, but you, my husband, might tpakt It clever and ,. tutorestlng. You say . your steHe are always twaddle aa you tlrst set them dawn." - "Do I? Well. 'what la It?" be said, staring across at tbe opposite roofs. "This situation Is novel. (Jo on. Never mind at long aa &ar Is anything at all In It." : - - . "There la thei Is a woman's heart In It. I think," shit whispered. "Is that any good?" U "Ob!" he sold. I Her voice had tailed off as If she had, a tval Idea, but was afraid of the sneer. "Well, there usual ly Is; that's ons of the component parts of the average story. Even humor Is the brighter fer tragedy lurking In tbe bacbgrouud. you know. Aoytblng In Ihe heart? 'Hull's the point Yes; anything lu this heart?" Another silcuce.i "Couldn't I tell you just as it came to we, theu?" she said. "I'm not clever euough to know. It's more of a sketch. Jwrhapi. I 1 Imagin ed two lovers. vey dear lovers. They got married, and there was a beautiful world before them, with auc'b peace at the end, If they knew! Make the man an artist. He lived for his art. The glrl-tho girl was ouly Just a girl; ihe lived for the man. She hung on his every word, you might say; she prayed for his success when he was never there to hoar, thought for him In ways that he would never know and checked her slnglug and moved softly so that he should never be disturbed at Lis work. You're Uot willing. Is It so illy?" " "(Jo on." he whispered. "There thure's nothing to write yet." "Thut WBUt on for years. The man. deeper and deeper In his work, never saw that bis wife was changing, that tho light had gone out of her eyes, lie forgot all he had roeaut to be for got after a time even to kiss hrr. and tbe girl xlic could never bring herself to. remind hlm-eV She still lived ouly for blm. but f never cared What she wore, never thought that her work might be bard hints Utile way, aud that there are somje women for whom years of such sl!uce ami loneliness apells death or worn. She was al ways crying at (lrnl and never dared to tell him why If he lid not see tr him- self and kept out hi mind should work. And be so f his way so that ml le sHiiei tor that he thought It aud spoke harsh r.t Int got so that 1 of lit own and nr when when he was Something cls ly and sneered am he lived la a wor wouldn't open bis tl knew that her bean side, longing for oil was bursting out kind word agaiu. Or or something 1 k-.' that. Could you tlintr begin anything wltll No answer. She tho man's outward would never again on a little faster, ! could not see, but stare was as If it n-lox. She went Kr voice tawing a thrill juxt as thou, piled that there mlg li his silence l:u t lie real dramatic .WKxIbllities in her mall liixplration. I think my butsbaiul could-yes! Tbe world la used to seeing the man grow indifferent and tboLwomau cold and pale; but you you trfight take the trag edy as It Is within fllie four walls and make it live and thtob in there. You I might put It that at flritlth uz mistake was to always atAintof fv ward to his goal, forgetting that t happiest time is now forgetting hr when he looks at last he will not I Just the same laughing girl a he bl' ried. Often he.left her, w tll s be wanted cheerful facta and relc tion fter hia work, and th wifa r only like a ghost creeping about t hnniuh And so at last, tor nwwt alternative to a broke a fe3tt heart hardened to etoaa. AfcJ, 'oi had so loved him had a dattr always to look her brightest aad for bin! That might have r 01 the end. as It often doear t-t t cam a blow-one blow mora tlia could bear. Well auppoee wa'li pose that one day lha irtftv ooaha or other, heard blm talklnj to ftfcnv Tha friend waa quiet; he bai 'What's tha matter w(tb wtJJi her? AL the romance gone that yeu need to talt , about r Make it-meka It tta ah kekk her breath foe tb answer, evea -Us-, even then; that even the eke waa. hungering to put bet arms all ar'"4 him, and tall blm, oh, no, It waa t at gone! And supposing ah bearl t aay : 'Bart Pooh, take no notice tllr -always the same. Wish to Ooa r timea I'd never married wkat 1 the expenses and tbe mtetrie at t Can't make bar out-aot ttke otlu men. Given It op long ago. Doot j ever marry, ekJ manf . Aa4 vtzZ the wife stood and cried to Ood t t her on tbe spot, and that GsJ C2 l answer, and that at last-t fcat wl something seemed aa if It wonil f K S T i J In her brain she crept tat 1X3 I band's study and took eat tbe I' that be kept in bla desk and put tt t her forehead, a&d-and almost r--- the trigger. Wouldat ftaptt c;1 a atory like tbatr Still no ana war. Tbe man bJ cr " cd still farther forward, bla ping the dealt, bla face fay la t dusk, bla stare widened. It leettf- ; somehow looked at If be feared fc I I life to look around, la fear ef a k: 1 watting for bla throat It was net I i wife tHlklng. It waa tragedy tkat tl3 come creeping Into the room, at . 13 sometimes did when be wrote late, ar3 aomethlng stood and breathed ta.!3 each shoulder, Tbe voice came again, aa from Way 0. ?--r,::-.;--"--rt--7- .--- r "Yost Vav she. naaaed tbe anoaaerv and that aavad hen. -He MOXM at l.J and tbe mind that Mway etnslaaxl a':- r eomethmg J Ktf tStnt ttt 7ZTt found. But the tber; 1 eae her bead, and It staid aJ atalct a&4 more than once.' when -4m bad paaaej her wttb hardly ward ar took aav my Ood. ihe eooM hot bear III G4 forgive bar, abe cannot bear It! The Indescribable Sob and a twin rush. A hand bad plucked ope 4b drawer at the man's side, and aeme thlng bright flaehed out Joat I tin be realized aomethlng and swayed up, with a hoarse cry: "Winnie! No, nor and faced the picture that waa to eat Into his memory for all time. -The dead silence, the stare wit which the wide eyea In her worn, white face seemed to search hia aenl wildly for a flicker of tbe truth I Then hir band dropped, and her face began to twitch plteoualy. Bis arms war out and the heart beat there yet " Winnie V be had whtapered-eaeh ay whisper. "Don't, don'tl Coma baca to me! Come back to mef And for those two Time put back the) hands of bla clock. But the atory. That waa not for publication. Loads 8tar. , .,- - - - -. - - - -': . - " Killing OaT Thistle. A correspondent of tbe Michigan Farmer writes as follows about kRUnf off Canada thUtles: The writer's method, which has bee very successful. Is as followa: The Jo Is let out to a boy (or boys), and the terms of the contract are "no kill, no pay." The result Is tbe boy gets bla pay , .... On my farm the thistles grow I patches, aud I pay so much per patch, according to size. The work Is begun in the spring. Kncb week for two or three weeks the boys cut tbe in with hoe about two Inches below tbe surface of the ground. Once In two weeks, for about three times and after this about once month, this job Is done during the bal auce of the season. By fall the thistles are smothered out, . ' " Tbe leaves of a plant are Its range. You cfio kill an oak tree by picking off Its leaves and buda for one seaaon. I plan to kill tblstk-a In Held devoted to cultivated crops. After the second or third cuttlug very few plant will appear. 4 By a little attention to tbe boy he will attend to the thistles and at the san.e time earn a little cash. I have tried salt, which kills tbe thistle, but la expensive and dou't help tbe boy. Hour !oaal Cards Are Oflva) H . "Women often send unnsages to their dressmaker of te' dry, goods ahops on postal cards," says The ladles' Home Journal, "Uachfng a hit of cloth, rib bon or lace 4 Sample.' This make the card litirasllablo,' so It la alwaye sent to the 'dead letter office and in variably d'eStyuywl'. Un-prestiwably niHU not lnfre(inrty- paate a clever joke or a telling political fragment upon a postal and aad It to a friend at least, start It. ; But It aerer arrlvf. Nothing may be auacbed to a' f-' card, nor may oae word be wrltt" '- on the address sldeerr,r;t the t Itself." -, -.'''-.. - ' , j, ' ...... - - - ...( ... , ...' ' ' 1 " -X