The Alliance-independent. (Lincoln, Nebraska) 1892-1894, January 25, 1894, Page 5, Image 5
JANUARY 25 im THE ALLIANCE -INDEPENDENT. i knowledge of righteousness, all sense of equity, and the liberty and power to enjoy equal natural rights. It la In It self monarch!-! taxation without repre sentation or service exchanged, and tends toward ever increasing industrial despotism and slavery. It arranges so f rut in claasfs one above another, and -. M1U WCaJC anaai www - - ' nnmnlatptv mi Rhine' those at bottom. It is the principal v cause, direct or indirect, of every gross crime and respectable sin. It desttoys faith in both God and man. All this It is and does. Why then have the churches stopped preaching against It? T$ Th workings of the whole damnable usury system are very clearly revealed ' in this Carlisle-Cleveland-fiat bond issue robbery. It amounts to this: take away from the government the power to 1 make legal tender paper currency, and allow the banks only to issue paper money. Then give the banks interest bearing bends for their non-interest bearing paper. The bank currency being s axchangeable for gold it Is virtually giv , Ing government notes at interest for non-inte-est bearlng notes u hose value mt currency (Upends on, is established by, governmental endorsements. In other ; , words, the government makes good ex- D changeable money of the national bank currency and gives it to the banks, and then gets down on its knees and begs the bankers to loan the government the government's own credit, and agrees to pay them and tax the people to pay them five per cent, yearly interest on - nnnn ueiu wuip - j o fifty millions of its own paper, its ewn credit. The man who upholds such ; folly, such Shylock robbery, such usurpation on the part of the bsneflci , aries of the government, is either a knave or a fool. Hawaiian Uaders, under the provi sional government, it Is reported, are completing preparations for the organi zation of a republlo The United States V had served as a model, says the New York Tribune; but it aaas, ureal care appears to have been taken in provid ing property and educational qualifica tions for the suffrage." The italics are ours. The property qualification seems 4 j ha ! tha p va of the Tribune, an im- provemem over our iuumii c4uan.jp the rich and poor. This is a significant remark, considering its source. The poor will not always have the ballot, if they do not make quick use of it for themselves. ' TuB administration program is a cor poration tax, instead of the Bryan in come tax. The corporation tax, ycu see, can be shifted to the broad shoul ders A the patient, defenseless people, the people who toil. For instance: levy a tax on the railroad cerporatlons and they will fix their tariff schedules to cover it. The people will pay it all and never know it; therefore politicians will choose to enact this bill into law. instead of Bryan's. And it will not ' compel the rich to perjure themselves. That is another and a moral considera tion. Have you stopped to think that that reoonsideratien by the Ways and If eans committee of their vote, which cuts Bryan's income tax measure out of the Wilson bill, makes it almost certain that the income tax bill will be effectu ally buried for th's s ssioc? It was Bynum of Indiana who did it by chang ing his vote. He is the came man who flopped from a very pronounced free coinage creed to the support of the ad ministration during the last session. He seems to have very accommodating principles. Fifty million dollars bonds for ten years means fifteen million in taxes drawn from tbe people and given to the usurers. Do the producing classes pro pose t pay this tax, not to support the government, but to support a power greater than the government, a power that demands this tribute from tbe government? Which is tbe real govern ment, the people, or tho bankers whom the govern meat bows down to? With out contradiction the less t ay tribute or taxes to the greater. Thi steel rail trust U paying one steel rail factory la Marjlaad 11,000 a day for discharging lu workmen and manufactutlag no rails. So states Congretsman Tom L. Johnson, who Is part owner of one of the steel-rail fac tories. And he says tha Wilton bill proposes to leave a tariff on steel rails sufficiently high to still protect the trust. Those robber tariff Domoorats! IIORMiUOWia cannot blow his bora la the Supreme Court t j t llcsolailons of the mate Partners Aidant Katlurard. Kdltnr Ahiamck Indkpindknt: W, the members of Eatarprtto Alli ance have adopted the following ru solu tions; Iwravlvf d. That we heartily endorse those reoUMtut edop'et at the State Alliance, held at UatUegs on January Snd, im. The a ve was duly fei nted at oar rMule s-f loo f AUUmt 2041), hM on January I3h, v, Jw IIakiuik, Vr W. U UutK'i i, Wy. ft that vur t!caU rad via the Missouri I'aelBa route for Han frtocttco, Cat Uty tlitt 080 im U etrt THINGS WORTH REPRINTING. The rich pauper and the poor pauper are both maintained at public expense but the rich are most expensive. Ar bor State. Here is a lesson ia bonds. It explains why some people want more bonds issued: Original bonded debt of the United States, 92,' t ,000,0f 0; 1 a d on the above bonded debt 113,000,000,000: and yet thejdebt is half as large as when first contracted, and now that a gold standard has been adopted It will re quire as much taxation and labor to pay off the remaining half t the national debt as to have paid off the entire debt prior to 1873 Denver News. We are in receipt of a pamphlet which is headed: Silvt r the Issue. Silver is not the issue, and any party that at tempts to make it the sole issue will be buried out of sight. The financial ques tion is an Issue and even that 's not the only issue. There are several questions of vast Importance to the people and they should not and must net be lost sight of. The exigencies of the times demand a broad view of affairs asd the announcement that silver is tbe issue is anything but that. Farmers Voice. NEBRASKA'S BOODLERS. FurTHS Aluakci-Ihkipssdent. The G. O. P. broker and boodler 'tis plain, H&va skinned the people again and again. They elect them to efflce, and Just the same The boodler that boodiea goes on who we game. Pickpocket and parsons, and drunkards, and tAnirlii - Preside at the state house with gamblers and roughs. Nebraska, h shown as Dlaln as can be There's a chance for the thlet In the land of the free.' The honest eld farmer Is ragged and lean, He works the year through a living to glean. While the btodler lights down like a wolf on on the fold. And scoops up tho taxes, both greenbacks and gold. . 'Ttf said Parson Andrews gets two thousand a year. Which is more than the state allews him, 'tis elesr, But its sot often the parsons to politics take So keep him In office for morality's sake. Up in Adams the Parson's a popular man, They'll send him to Congress if th j possibly can If you want a gold standard, the Parson's your man, He'd make a good mate for Sherman and Dan While Mo to take a short rest To care for our finances Moore's doing his best, When one boodler steps ont there's plenty in . store; They'll ruled Nebraska slice the days of yore, The State Is bard np and the treasury bare, But a debt of a million no boodler can scare, Stand up for Nebraska, for the OOP. shout, Keep confidence booming or you'll drive capi, tal out. Popiccb. English as She is Spoke In Japan. One day. said Eli Perkins in his Jap anese Lecture last night, while in Yo kohama a Japanese sailor was arrested for assaulting a jlnrikisha man. The English court room was crowded, and desiring to hear the English language as spoken officially in tne court room by a wise magistrate, I crowded in with tne rest. The polite old magistrate wore sand als, a kimono and silk hat. Putting on his glasses he looked solemnly at the culprit and the examination cummenced. 'Why do you strike this jlnrikisha man?" "He told me impolitely." "What dots he told you impolitely?" ' He insulted me, saying loudly, 'the sailor, the sailor!' when I am passing here." "Do you strike this man for that?" "Yes." "But do notyoustr.ke him for it .' forbidden." "I strike him no more." "Good," Bald the magistrate, "if he will strike or terrify tne people with enormous voice, he will hinuelf be an object of fear tor the people. Goodbye. Do not continue nere me otner time." Lecturer's Blunders. Every lecturer, fald EH Perkins Is liable to blunder in pronouncing words. Even tbe CheBtertieldian Geurge W. Curtis told me once toat come fatality almost always impelled him to pro nounce "bottomless pit' 'plttomless bot.' 'One day' said Mr, Curtis, after 1 had hurled the Infamous pro slavery party to the plttomless bot In a political speech in New Usven, I returned to my wife on Staten Island. While I was confessing my awful biunder my wife suddenly screamed I ' 0 George I My neck !' " "What's tha matter!" I asked, Quite alarmed . i here's a plUaoatier" "A what?" "A tappakUJer." What In the world d you mean?'' "Oh. dear," she moaned, as she cluuhej me ftautUaily. "A kltternal ter! You know George! A yatlerktl ler!" "O," I laid, krttshisg the harmless ca'tr(.Ulr otT. 'now ( know how I came 1 1 make an Idiot of myaott to New Havrn."' Nw lltvra )U-gUter. Ijrea t'aaaiy ItaaHaa ta tawpf . Kait.HU, Kan., Jan. 31. The coun ty roraiuikaliuars Saturday refuted the vffar f a cow promt at ad by (miU I'm Tat t'omuiUalonr MoCon noil. Tha rad a tasea for l.va Hiil amount to It J,s The otTi-r r tJ,'MOt! old amtiV, la Mad wtii now tlht the fa on tha grwund ttt tiajittt and witfali aa a wiucnW A lMia fctllM ia (karak. lf aa.L'i.1., Jan. JiTwa t hlna nf a httfttUlttdor Kfl"j"l Ib a flfht while attoalin.! hut lay a hod at Trinity MethmtUt t:piamial vfcitreft ytardy aherauoa and aa a retail one will die and another ta badly wwasnU'l k An Outgrown System and Scclal Needs. NO 1. No one who is sincere and well in formed doubts the existence of serious social antagonisms. No one doubts but those antagonisms arise out of the operation of the present Industrial system, and that this system is now known as the capitalistic system of production. In what do these antagonisms exist? How do they manifest themselves? Are they necessarily involved in the nature of the capitalistic system? Thete questions seem to arise natur al'y out of a consideration of the facts first stated. The thinkers and writers who seem to be giving us the most satisfactory answer to these questions satisfactory because truest are these who start from the propositions that the produc tion of the means to support human life and the mode of exchanging those productions are the basis of all social structure. These propositions are not an evolution from the inner consciousness of a single philosopher, or of a school of philoso phers. They are the result of a laborious and painstaking examination of the history of every notable society that has ap peared In history. The fact that Is made clear by such examination is, that the distribution of wealth, and the, consequent division of society into classes or orders, is depen dent upon tthat Is produced, and how It is produced, and how the products are exchanged. From this point of view the final cau ses of all social changes and political revolutions are to be sought Not in men's brains, nor in men's better insight into "eternal truth and justice," are to be found the true causes of social and political changes, but in the modes of production and exchange. Not in the philosophy, but in the eco nomic system of an. epoch are to be sought the true causes of such changes. This is the standpoint of historical materialism. Materialism, because it is aa 'ism of which the subject matter is uhatU pro duced to support human life, how it is produced, and how the products are ex changed. (Not the metaphysical materialism of the 18thcentury.) -Historical, because it exhibits in ob jective facts a process of change in time an evolution in modes of produc tion and exchange. . The investigation and statement of this development givesthe propositions stated. Guided by the propositions stated, if there is a growing conviction that ex 1st ing social institutions are unreason' able and unjust; that what was reason has become unreason, that what was right is dow wrong, all this is proof positive that the modes of production and exchange have undergone such changes, that the social order, adapted to earlier economic conditions, is no longer ia keeping with the present mode of production and exchange. The present labor organizations in all "free" nations, and the existence of the Populist party, so-called, are the reflex in thought of the conflict in fact in the whole world of industry. This ideal reflection, first manifested Itself in the labor organizations of the working class the class first suffering from the conflict. Organizations have spread and are spreading and will continue to spread till all classes suffering from the collis ion shall be inoluded. If the economic education of the classes suffering from the conflict shall j keep pace with the intensity of their suffering, it will not take a generation to consolidate them into one political party. On the ether hand, it is not to be for gotten, nor overlooked, that tbe capi talistic interest is organized In defease of its "rights;" that it is In possession ef the government, national, state, ceunty and municipal fer tho most part. The maklag, Interpreting, snd execut isg of the laws are all doae la the inter est of and in harmony with the estab lished capitalistic system of production, aa log Ically they shoald he. This fastis part proof that trial is prod seed, how it is produced, and how the produeta are exchanged, constitute the basis of the social structure, and thereby deter mine the political and Juridical systems of a society. A brief review of tne hUtorlea gene sis of the present system of prod action will make rltsr the aotagonUro of to day. It will be seen that the new prod . tlve foroos have outgrown tho capitalis tic node of using them. This eoiiflk't betweea productive (tr ees and nicdt of production Is not a conflict engendered la thi mind of snea-llkithst between original s!a asd divine )ullo." It oiiats aa sa objective fact. ouUlda of us, asd laJ.pedeatIjof the UUa aUu0f thsiua who have brought Una. W. A. Jo 1. T.aat,l M lf f-t ff H M a Ha Wa e ! . Na Wa tal a akat II id ra.Mw4t W Tf . Na4 IWw la V K Mta I all) a.1 ky m rat taU I V Uaa H W Si) m ff kla i 0. . . Of OaetOO. 0)aaa aa.ae. , IHil'OIOIlSliS. Three Cent Column. "For Sale." "Wanted, "'For Exchange." and small adrertiaemenu for short time, will be chanted threa ceata per word for each Inner tton. Initials or a number counted as one word. CiSh with the order It you wat anything, or have anything that anybody else "wants, " make it known through this column. It will nsy, WANTED Butter, mtn snd poultry at 231 South Ulh St. Lincoln. Neb. Highest price paid. ; UENTS WANTED To sell choice nureery i- stock Cbktb NDKSsaiM, Crete, Nab. liWB SALE A (rood lire Poonllst paper la a 1 towa of SOU) inhabitant, good raaaous for selling. Address. Alliance-independent. TANTED -Twenty thousand new subscrt- DerS tO TBI AM.!iaCC-JNDEPEDBMT. TINGLKV St HCRKET, attorneys at-law. im O St., Lincoln. Neb. TIN LEY & BURKETT. atrorneys-at-law, 1026 O tt., Lincoln, Neb. Abstracts ex amined. HAVK YOU anything to sell or trader Then advertise tbe fact through thi column and be surprised at tbe result. AGENTS WANTED We start you in bust nrss on receipt of SI 00 we will rend you 14 valuable receipts such as bow to make Shoe UrenKluK. Extraels and tfnent-s, lolletHoap, tlcky Kly Fa per etc. New England Adv. Co. Lowell, Mass. IF YOU WANT to buy, sell, trade or borrow Any thiUK. remember, you n:ls it badly if von do not make it known thrautrh this col umn. Only S cents per word each insertion Cash with the order. REMEMBER that Thb AI.I.IAMCS Ikdepkm dent is the best advertlttlng medium in the meat M ben writing to aay of our adver tisers don't forget to tell them where yon saw tneir'ad" FARMS ! FARMS 11 FARMS!!! 400 choice Eastern Nebraska farms IM clear. 150 moderately Incumbered. Price from S10 to rao per acre, wnie exactly wnat you wn ana woere you want it. a numoer oi excel lent bargains it takea soon. C. R. BOATRIGHT, 301 N. Y Ufa lldg, Omaha, Neb. 0. J. WILCOX, ACCOUNTANT. 1617 Washington St, Lincolu, Nibr. Books and accounts audited and adjusted Disputed accounts prepared for trial. Ao- counts of county officials and corporations cnecici a np. Dimple systems or DooK-aeepina arranged for parties bavins- little practical knowledge of accounts. Correspondence solicited. F. M. WOODS. Fine Stock Auctioneer. 1 203 O St., klpcolp, pb Van Morehead Proprietor of the SoutlAlMon Poultry Yard has taken more premiums on poultry than any other breeder in Boone Co., Neb. Enclose stamp for reply if you want a gooc jtowi or Jggs. For Sale, A FIVE HORSE POWCB Electric Motor In good condition. Will be sold cheap If sold soon. . . . . . JVI. O. FEIUL.Y, Corner 11th & M Sts., Lincoln, Neb. Te Make a Trip to the Best Alvantsge It Is Es sential to : : START RIGHT. : : If Going to Kansas Don't Call On Us, BUT IFCOINGTO CHICAGO, MILWAUKEE, OSKOSH, SIOUX CITY ST. PAUL, DULUTH, FREMONT, HOKFOLK, CHADRON, HOT SPRINGS, RAPID CITY, DEADWOOD, Anv point in the two Dakotai or Central Wvominir. call on us, Because the Only Line running Ul tect lu hhu niKniicuiau: puiuu, un lis Own 7.'" rniies ot road, it is tne Best- W. M. Shipman, A. S. Fielding, Gen'lAfft. City T'kt. Agt, 1 1 33 O Street, Lincoln. Neb. Depnt. Comer S and 8th streets. Not ce of Sale Under Chattel Mortgage. Notice is hereby Riven that by virtue of a chattel mortgage dated tbe 13ih day of June imw. duly niea in tne omce oi tae county clerk of Lancaster county Nebraska, on the Hlb day of June 1HM, and executed by H. K. King to Buupbrey Brothers Hardware Company to secure tha payment of the sam of 1 30.50. all of wblcbsum togetner wun interest at ten (10) per cent, thereon is now due and unpaid, bald BorteaKe cowing and conveyinit ta tbe said Humphrey Brnthaia Hardware t'nnpany to secure the payment of said sum of ntunejr one (1) four (4) sborel badger, one (1) mare muie, Drewn, nine years am, one (U brown home mule, about nine years, caltftd Jack and Jennie. Default baviua beaa ta Kle la the pay ment of said sum of meney and no suit or other proceedings having been inati uted to racoTersaiaaabtoraoy pari tnareor, and for tbe further reaaon that said snartKitgee feeling itaelf Insecure aud ansate, therefora tha said marigaKea wt.1 sail tbe property therein, and above deacrtbed, aa follows, lo-wlt: One four hovel badger, one mar mule, brown, sine years old, one brown horse muie about nine year old, called Jack asd Jeoule. Alt of wmrn property is new io na poaaeaalia at It. t King on the farm kept by tliu near Agaew, MMicaaier eounty.Nenraaaa. hald aala will be at publte auction In rroat ot what U knowa aa tae Smith fe4 stabla M. SIS "H ' etiaat la the eltr of Lincoln, Laacaater county, Nxbraaka. on rrtdav, fobraaty mik. 14, begmaiug aill ciora ei saia aay. Dated this i(Jrl day of January, ISM ItUMfMas Haoa. Haauw.aaCo . .'t Mrtaaaaa, TINOLKY A iiUKKKTT, Attorneys at Law, toaftOSt. LfncoinNsb NOTICK. TurkatlasH Joksana Jsmee H. Nawklrk. and Nwtrs. iflrtt tiauia unamiwic, kia ana i rwiiimi ! UMu .uwiiu.a awta-a that a tfce ITtk af u Iamtiwtf, awt, , 11 Mtrtll. a rwtitii i.t the Si.raaa mi. itiit kank aa i'iiial.1 kriu. Si4 kta enih.a ta Ike tnmn tuiui l l.au. wr ewttuiy. Na 'a. aealaai a4 Seraalaae, I w m wtta t.iariaa I, Itaunlsg. Aaha aaHs aed .4t U Hiak.a), tfta vlijatt aa4 a)ar at au iaitea !BS aR1fa'iia a.-artaia lu.irv aea iaaai4 kf tea ale4ate. t kar-aa I rui.alae ant Aaaa haaaiaj tkarlaa M Joimiki aa4 awae-t It tkla aiatiS, r H at ) taa ( Uut .'sa aM aat l m a ae h ttia .rwiaa n ' ka4r4 raat lf iti ktitJ4 4 taty feat Sy as tka a t-aa kaat4 Iwat euatfc at Ifca awtk a' In. ul ika wa (.! klk aaa at. e I THI In Mattel Italkta, Mlaf M laa ax.t4 put Hi , ams e t.af tt aat aka. a4 ika iU lt S'ef tkat a t t faaut Jf. li wiaf hi. .vt nt ail ltatnt tltte a4 ttlia fa. at ittptitHi la a.4 ta ik ! a. UJ tkt tea him mtf ka an4 hI wat a fr tkaranl ttitita atai aa Iratd tha lawaai aaa kle) with 4 aatt aretaielra4 w tniaef said ketitkw a a kalwa wan a "k tan U U. Stt'aaiU, S-tM nall, rr Tiaaiaf avarv, sieAtt fa, Ita4, eaef SA lH, J U aTSW-.''J.I'l!li REAL JOHN J. GILLIL AN. Real Estate total Biter. LINCOLN, NEBRASKA. Fine lots and acre tracts for sale near the colleges. Fine homes and business blocks In Lincoln, and lands throughout Nebraska, for sale or exchange. If you wish to bu), sell or trnrle write or call upon ma. TINGLE Y & Attorneys-at-Law, 1026 COLLECTIONS MADE AND MONEY" REMITTED SAME DAY AS COLLECTED. Windsor Hotel- JOSEPH OPBLT, Mmaftr. Coy- Htfr Q Sts, Lcincolq, Neb. JOHN B. WEIGHT, F. E. JOHNSON. J. H. McCLAT. President Vloe - THR" Columbia OF MNOOLkN, NEB. Capital, $2 5 0,0 O O. First : National : Bank, LINCOLN, NEB j i ttJrav . uapiiai, - - - uu.uuUe Sior-plvLS, $loo,ooo. N. S. HARWOOD, c. S. LIPPINOOTT, President. F.M.COOK, Ase't Cashier. C.A.HANNA, Cashier. H. S. FREEMAN, Vice-President Ass't Cashier. DIRECTORS: N. S. Harwoed, John Fitzg-erald, J D. Macfarland, R. E, Moore, D. W. Cook, Charles A. Hanna, A. B. Clark, T. M. Marquett, John H.Ames, John L. Carson, F. M. Cook. F Jilll Price, $49.75. SEND FOR CATALOGUE. A gents Wanted for the A. KOSPEj Ground IS NOW used bj ail the principal feeders of f-tock, aod is better appi eciated as its merits become known. It is nsed for stock of all kinds, and yon cannot afford to feed stock for market without it There ia nothing that assists so much in THIS MEAL, and you have only to use ir to be convinced. ONE POUND IS b EQUAL TO Sum OF CORN. bags of lOOlbs each. Price, 10( lbs. If your di aler does not order and we will ship promptly. Woodman Linseed Oil Works, Omaha.. Toarista from M Inn t sou Pwiats. CommearlBJ October 6th. a Tourist car karvs Minneapolis evrry Thnratlay mornlnir anl rans to rue bio and via Albert Juan to lulu in bus Juactlon. s rivlnf at 117 p. m. and there mwnects with our V. It I. A V. train No. 13 which will hold at that point for ar rival of the II. C. 11. A N. train carry Ids; that er, and via Kansas Citjr arrive at rubio second tnoraing. IWrlanlnf tX:tobtr lOih, Toorltt car will tave Athnrt la every Tuaaday tnnrnl"f and run via Wl8nai)lls A St LoutaKy. through APfus U IVsMuinaa, arrtvleif at alsjht and tnare lay over and ha taha "Ulf Five' I'rl 4mt raorelsr. tnd run vlaOnta&a, IJa- ctJls asd IViile villa to t'uchlo. Tmuaila. Ia Vlitrt.ta ami ail ril n La la the xith lwlBalnf lWt , ItHft lil the MiaatHirl raolde rai have on sale Turias tl-a is ta all wInU ta FlarMa, liNrela, N.-rth Carol taa. south CaroU aa, Now Matron, Alaiama, Tela, atd lHitaaa tlcksts (mat to raixrn Juna Ui. hJt. The aN.ia Is the Heuthsra rataa V'tu have you tav ha lwsts hr. Cult at Cltj Tlctst vfTce .1( u ttrtet -. Ti World tfuware altatm la Jaauary, vt the tlUa uri red&g nxtte. CU tUket vCWe. IJttl O strtet ESTATE. BURKETT, O St., Lincoln, Neb- PresldenL Cashier. Nat'l Bank, ffaraM fir Fin Xm Kimball Pianos and Organs tir.j.Oijiaha, Neb. Oil Cake. fattening as Put up ir. OMAHA- $1.50 per keep it send us draft or monef lUtUlMT CAK to cAiaroimiA. Cheap Rate, Qwlvk Trip, The travel from the north anu north- territory, tapped by TBI Grbat Boca Island Hoct. has denanded srrvka of this charsctar, and brlsaias; Octobrr 6th, tourist cars will leave MlenajHtlls every Thuriday noratof and Join the regular tourist train out of Cblcsro evrrjr Tnursday alternooa at Columbus Junction, luwa, at 11 1. M. Oatrst Iowa and th grtatwrst slope district of the ttlata. dt tnards and will rtcvlve a sloRliarswie, and brglaaler (Viobr 10th, a I'hltl t-Hk Islaed Kirursloa Car will ave Albert Lea evcrf TueJa tnoratsir, asd ft Uer mora, Kt lK4f sad Aefttt will strive at ixfcloir tat evt alar, asd W4 aaE A. M ft mi m tK ,H,r 1va, ' via Omaha, IJboula aid H)Kw villa, tt which polat It wM k la the ttf u?ar TwtHiry train (rem Chicago. rult ttsrilcufars as to cstep rata tlrhvts tvt this trip asd sJaoaa letMiat of brth la the tourist ce tkaerfuilf rWi-jcn sf iil'vs'lfn ui st; Uivat Rurl aad lU u Tlchvt Aftat, or sgsat It eu n tistlces al rvamrvUsf Haw JKm. bf iTi O 1'. A .JnU-ejo ILusd trio tuTiau u iWide twlets oa sal f4 aat.1 June U. via tba lalaaiMtft 1'a. S.1a ruuU. Cttv Yhitat afttoe isiii ustmt f. 100 lb.