Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 24, 1889)
p. ' : i y 1 ' -. . . fe-" -f- is-v ., -. I.' FOR YOUXG FOLKS. Hew Warriors, Young and Gay, Often Cut and Run Away. Uttlc Peopl -Animal at y- Count! lag-Out Kliyiue Ktc., Etc. Aa Embry Napoleon. "What I grow into a great, big man," Mu.vd Tommy Ip, A noldicr brave I'll 1. 111 hares gun and a noisy drum -Aad I'll make the enemy run like fun. But I'll Dot run. not 1.'' said be. Just Uw-n came buzzing over the wall Mist Brownie Hiv. Good mornin?, sir," said f he. Qoict as a flash sped the warrior fray ! fee, I'm playinsr enemy' to-day. And cannot stay I" gasped Tommy Lee. An Intelligent Dog. A Brattleborough (Vt) special says: 7fcrc passed through Brattleborough late other day a pretty little dog-, who has seen a good deal more of the world thaa most dogs of bis age. His came is Teary and those who ask whose little 'das he is are informed that his master it tm postmaster at Albany, N. Y. Tamj is a sky-terrier, and is as pretty a ha is intelligent and curious about tha world. Tha mail clerks at the Albany Post tMate early conceived a likinsr for Tony, arte far a morning constitutional used to walk with his master to the office. He liked them, too, and took great joy ;aa watching them sort the mail and lock 'tha hags. Soon he began to follow the ' await wagons to the trains and not long after he followed the bags into the mail car. One day he was found comfort- avatjr feated on the topmost bag. One f the clerks shared his dinner with him aw the dog rode on to Boston over the and Albanv. When the m;iil . taken out he betook himself to the ire room and waited for a train hack, smuggling into the mail car again and again sharing lunch with the darks. He rode back to Albany, but tha aext week was found in another I tar, and soon he began to spend i ef his time "on the road." He M aot always go to Boston. Some- . he went to Sprinslield. and more the tired of traveling and left at "vaaof the smaller stations. He be- - cms known by all the clerks on the nad aad lived in comparative luxury Murine his trips. After leaving the car, he always ' atatrad around the station till a return tfltm pulled in, and then he made for tha mail-car, if it had one. Sometimes hot off on a branch road and then he ' woald be gone for weeks before he wejald find his way back to the Boston - ad Albany line. On the present trip ' he has been gone three weeks. At r Spnag field he got on a Connecticut ri v- r train and by the time be readied - BraUfuborough he had discovered his eantake, and jumped after the mail "when it was tossed from the car. He waited about the station all the morn fas, aad then boarded a northern train "ad went to Bellows Falls, found there aafc he was going away from home, aad came back again. For two days he twde about on different trains, and 'then "ha fall ia with a mail clerk who had 1 kaawa him on the Boston and Albany, wad who put him off at Palmer, gave ana a good square meal, and started ' teas toward home. A Baal Good Boy aa Model. A Philadelphia minister preached ' flataa tbe text, "Little Lord Fauntleroy" laat Sunday, in order to get up a sermon estate subject, "Honor thy rather and Ha! good text; good sermon. i some other bovs the parson have beard of that were farily I ia this line of conduct. It is i af one of them, in the book of , that "Jacob obeyed his father aetber;" but then be was never and a young man named -nourished bis father and his tf and Jonathan stood bv his sooet grandly. Never a man in ' tha Bills aor a prig in a novel who pre - aaahtaocb a splendid text for. just that v aart af a sermon as does this manly son wt Mat popular father. Anybody mmU twre Lord Fauntleroy' s mother wweaaVl just find the chapter, by tha "Way, an which tha account is given of tlaV hart It's somewhere in the Second Ukwit af Comical, probably; but to aWSMr sweh a father as Saul, at beauti- tenderly, and nobly as did ', ine young asan any i himself a sol end id ser- itext. It nreachee it- mtX Awi Janaesb's nm bare always tseMaMarad modal of obedience aad JJaaraael Oh. my son. there have ttHbdrf "real'' Joi boys, quite as if laaue imaginary ooea. my sMMHacb'a1! kLL Awi Umi DOTS. , Ia& mm wmm wba raalty J Vaatd tttwl. raaj ftX If tou t laawwrt ' rrm want to be An imitation of an affecta tion? A copy of a copy? Burdette. I'retty Street Picture. A young girl stopped to admire a costly painting in tbe window of an art store on Woodward avenue, says tbe Tetroit Free Press. She stood there some time and was turning away when her eyes fell on a poor little kitten huddled in a corner of the window next to the street. In a moment the expres sion on the girl's face had changed from one of admiration to one of pity. She bent over the forlorn little animal, smoothed its ruffled f ur and caressed its lean sides. The poor little object re cognized a friend, for it crowded closer to her side and rubbed its head against her band. The picture within the window was cold and dead i ompared with that liv ing picture oustide. The girl was evi dently thinking of her past. She was living over again the scenes of home life when happy faces clustered about the hearthstone. The joyous frolics of childhood came to her in her day dream, the memories of a sunny child with just such a kitten in her aims had made her unconscious of the place or the curious glances of the pus.ers-by. It was some time before she moved from the spot, and as the kitten bounded after her she turned as if to pick )t up, then walked quickly away and was soon lost in the passing crowd. A Proff ssional Ciirrertioiilnt. Absolutely the latest importation from England established herself yes terday on upper Broadway, says a writer in the Sun. She is a tall and rather hard-featured woman from Man chester, who displays the extraordinary sign on the door of tier flats: "Disci plinarian of Children." Her sister es tablished the particular "profession." which she follows, in London nearly two years ago. and it is now transplant ed to New York. The mothers and fathers of families will probably be able to judge whether the idea is worth en couraging or not. "My sister," said the Manchester woman, who lias established herself here, "realizing that the majority of mothers love their children too much to punish them severely, conceived the idea of setting herself up as a public disciplinarian. She is a woman of great force of character and unerring judgment in all matters concerning children, and she had extensive experi ence as a visiting mu se before adopting her present business. It is her idea that children are more severely punished when they are frightened than through any physical means. To slap a child in the heat of passion while the child is ex cited and utirulv does not have half as salutary effect as- the more mature and considered punishment, such as impri sonment in a dark wardrobe or sending the little one to bed without supper. Better than this is to threaten the child w,th a visit from the bugaboo. The dread of the arrival of this awful per sonage will act as an incentive to good conduct with the most fractious chil dren in the world. My sister is a buga boo, and that is about what I am. The fee in England for visiting a house and disciplining the children is two shillings. this involves medical advice drawn from the fund of considerable experi ence in the world, besides whatever suggestions the condition of things may naturally lean un to. Besides this nart of my business, I hope to teach, doctor and nurse the little ones. Of course, there are points of antagonism between these dinerent functions, but the effect is good upon the children. Tarioua Alphabet. The Sandwich Islands alphabet has 13 etters; the Burmese 19, Italian 20, Bengalese 21, Hebrew, Syrian, Chaldee and Samaritan, 22 each, French 23, Greek 24, Latin 25, German, Dutch and English, 26 each, Spanish and Scla vonic 27 each, Arabic 28, Persian and Coptic 32, Georgian 35, Armenian 38, Russian 41, Muscovite 42, Sanscrit and Japanese 50, Ethiopic and Tartarian 202 each. Countlng-Out Rhymed. The following are a few of the many rhymes used by boys to decide who shall take the first inning in many minor games; Ana, mana, mona. mike; Barcelona, bona, strike, Care, ware, frow, frack; Hallico, ballico, wee, wo, wack! This, also, is subject to eountless va riations; "Barcelona" becomes "tusta tona," etc. One form ends in: Huldy, guldy, boo, out goes you. Ana, mana, dipery Dick; Delio, dolio, Dominick; Hitcha, pitcha, dominitcha, Hon, pon, tush. In some districts the third line is given as, "Houtcba, poutcha, dorainoutcha," and in others, "Hotcha, potcha," etc, "Tush" may also become "tus" or "tusk." THE COUNT OUT. Haley, maley, tippety, fig; Tiney, toney, tombo, nig; Goat, throat, country Dote; Tiney, toney, tig. Eatutn, peat urn, penny pie, Babyloni, stickum.stie, Stand you out thereby. Besides rhymes of the character of the above,!, e, , consisting of a mixture of gibberish with disconnected words, there are many rhymes containing no uncouth words, but possessing in gen eral a jingle easily recognizable. One, two, three, Nanny caught a flea; The flea died und Nanny cried; ' Out goes she! l.a,S,,8,.,7.8, : Mary at tha cottage gate, ? Eating grapes off a plate, Tbiaiafhrw lso, "plums'' in place mm "garden irate" for wm "oot tare oof" tfeMftMKi Mm the oMatiat-ataM M "tu" ta m2r i rfcrwM. , lieet-her and IngcrsolL Living Oinrrli. j Once I'ol. Ingersoll was thrown, oq eidptitflllv into the society of Henry Ward I5eecber. There re Jour or I five gentlemen present, all of whom I were prominent in the world ot J brains. A variety of topics were discussed with decided brilliancy, but no allusion made to religion. Tlw distinguished infidel was, of course, too polite to introduce the subject himself, but finally one of the party, desiring to see a tilt between Bob and 1 Beecher, made a playlul remark about Col. Inseieol's idiosyncrasy, j as he termed it. The Colonel at i once defended bis views in his usual ! ppt rhetoric; in fact lie waxed elo ! quent. He was replied to by several gentleman in very effective repartee, 1 Contrary to the expectation of all. I Mr. Beecher remained an abstracted listener and said not a word. I he gentleman who introduced the topic with the hope that Mr. Beecher would answer Col. Ingersoll at last remarked: "Mr. Beecher have you nothing to say on this question?'' The old man slowly lifted himself from his attitude and replied: "Nothing; in fact, if you will ex cuse me for changing the conversa tion, 1 will sny that while you gentle men were talking my mind was bent upon a most deplorable spectaclw which I witui'KRed to-day. "What was it?" at once inquired Col. Ingeresoll, who, notwithstanding his peculiar views of the hereafter, is noted for his kindness of heart. "Why," said Mr, Beecher, "as I was walking down town to-day I saw a poor lame man wit h crutches slowly and carefully picking his way through a cesspool of tnud, in the endeavor tocrcsn theKtreet. He had just reached the middle of the filth when a great big burly ruffian, him self all bespattered, rushed up to him, and jerking the crutches from under the unfortunate man, left him sprawl ing and helpless in the pool of liquid dirt, which almost engulled him. "What a brute he was," aid Col. Ingersoll. ''What a hruto he was," they all echoed. "Yes," said the old man rising from his chair and brushing ba:k ls long black hair, while his yes glit tered with their old time fire ns he bent them on Col. Ingersoll; "yes, Col. Ingersoll. and you are that man. The human soul is lame, but Christi anity gives it the crutches to enable it to pass across the pathway of life. It is your teachings that knock these crutches from under it and leave it a helpless and rudderless wreck in the slough of despond. If robbing the human soul of its only support on this earth religion -lie your pro fession, why ply it to your heart's content. It requires an architect to erect a building; an incendiary may reduce it to ashes." The old man sat down and silence brooded over the scene. Col. Inger soll found that he had a master in his own power of illustration and said nothing. His (ilrl Cleared Him. A Missouri farmer had some wheat stolen, one night, and he was so sure that he knew who the thief was that he came into town and secured a warrant for a certain j-oung man living near hirn. When the case came up for trial the defendant said he could prove an alibi. In order to do this he had brought in "his girl" a buxum lass of 22. She took the stand and swore that he sat up with her from seven in the evening until broad daylight next morning "People can lie very easily mistak en," observed the plaintiffs lawyer. "I don't care I knowhe was there." she replied. "What did you talk about?" "Love!" she promptly answered. "What time did the old folks go to bed?" "I gave 'em the wink about 10." "Sure he was there at midnight, are you?" "Yes, sir." "Why are you sure?" Hhe blushed, looked over to her lover, and laughed, and getting a nod to go ahead, she said: - "Well, sir, just ns the clock struck 12 the old man jumped out of bed up stairs and hollered down, 'Sarah, yer mar want some o' that catnip tea,' and we got such a start wo broke the bock of the rocking chair and wont over backward keplunk!" "Then the jury must understand you were seated on Samuel's knee?" "I object," put in Samuel's lawyer, and his honor remembered the days of his youth and sustained the objection. Take a Herring for Yoor Cold. PitUburg Dinnutch. I was traveling with a circus once in England and got laid up with a cough, cold and sore throat thut I thought waa going to lay me on the shelf lor the rent of the season, but a French sailor came along and cured me. He took a raw herring, split It, wrapped it in a cloth, saturated the whole thing with coal oil, and tied it about ray throat and neck. I waa well in two days. When I came here I told about tbe remedy to a Ger man matron in whoae family I boarded. "Why," said she, "it's an old Ger man family remedy, and baa bam owau ot mj vmtjm arar amoi 1 can riaiiDer. It'a ia&Uible." Telling Snake Stery. I'unssotawnr.v Spirit, It is not without a certain degree of chain in and humiliation that we proceed to whack several feet off the tail of that sequent we spoke of last week but careful investigationhnsled us to believe that it waa not as large as at first reported. Asa rule, we do not believe in economy in giving the dimensions of a snake. When telling a pnake story, a large yellow serpent, with a spring calf in it etomacbi comes just as cheap as a common garter snake with a toad in its mouth. By buying in large quantities and paving cash, we are enabled to give our readers the benefit of the dis count and furnish them larger and better authenticated snake stories for the money than nny of our con temporaries. But this boa-coiistnc-tor we spoke of hist week was sever al sizes too large for even those of our customers who have the most voracious appetites for the marvel ous. They could not, somehow, swallow it. Sotn of them iiukIo he roicatteiupls to do so, and were will ing to make still further attempts. But we do not wish to lie too ex acting, and will therefore take our little hatchet and cut it down some 's hat. The main outline of thestory was correct, but a more conserva tive estimate olthesize of the ser pent places its length nt In t ween eight and ten feet. And then it was not yellow, either. It wax, it nr. pears, a common bhick Hnnke. A e are constrained to add this foot note to Inst week's snake story alter protracted interviews with Messrs. l'antill and I)i!ts, who it seems are not willing to stand over n sixteen fo3t snake, and have no desire to de tract anything from the fame of the author of the "Inferno" or the "Ara bian nights." Poison IUngs. In Italy the poison ring was car" ried to the perfection of malicious imagining. Tne "audio morte" was occasionally resorted to as a means of putting an enemy out of the way. A hollow point in the bezel, worked by n spring, conimunicnted with the receptacle behind, for t ho poison, in such u. way that its villainous wearer could, in giving his adversary a hearty grip of the hand, inflict a mortal scratch. The point was fashioned to look Jike'nu ornament. Ho deadly nnd enduring was the pois on contained in these rings, tha t some twenty or more years ago death was nearly occasioned by handling one unwittingly. A curio fancier was turningover gerns in a shop in Paris, when he fell fainting and was with difficulty restored. It was found that he had been wounded by a poison ring. This instrumentof destruction was also worn in perilous times; in order that the owner might commit sui cide rather than (nil into an enemy.s hands. Another kind was furnished at the back with a slide, which could lie slipped back by the wearer, who would drop the poison into the wine he offered to a hated guest. This kind was affected by Cu'sar Borgia, whose own signet ring bore an in scription little suited to his character "Fa is ce que dois, avion que pour ra." Another form of poison ring wus the one which had for its bezel the key to a casket. The wearer would hand his ring in a confidential manner to a visitor, and desire h'm to hand him some article from his jewel box. The key, in lieing turned in a somewhat stiff lock, would give the unwary confidant a prick, whit h had for him fatal results. London Standard. The Pie's rUre 1" HIlory. Boston Trnwrit. Secretary Busk is fond ol pie. He loves pie as William the Conquerer loved the tall deer. Unlike the Nor inan, he does not want to prevent onyliody else satisfying the toste that dominates him. On the contra ry, he would like to see pie on every table in the land, however humble. There are those who say that pie three times a day is responsible for the dyspepsia of New England, but the more rational belief is that pie is somehow involved with thegreatness of New England, and is part of that common glory which gilds our histo ry and irradiates the path of our fu ture. While it is by no means fixeel beyond controversy, there is yet rea sonable ground for the belief that the Pilgrims brought over pie with them in the Mayflower. Certainly there wus mighty pasties of venison, and also of fruit baked in merry England not long before they went to Holland, The Indians never knew pie; and the Indians who were strong and warlike when the Pil grims landed are now n weak and vanishing race, whereas the descend ants of the Pilgrims possess the land. This coincidence will not lie lost to thoughtful minds. Pio arid precedence go together. The men who faced the British it Concord, the men who toiled all night ut Bunker Hill and fought all the next day, were pie-enters. Massachusetts was the great pie-enting state, nnd Mas sachusetts furnished more men than any other state to the Continental army. There nreseveral allusions to pio in Washington's correspondence, lie notes on one occasion that his cook had fallen upein the discovery that apples could be made into pio. It is not a fair presumption that this secret was imparted to him by some New England soldier? Washington's life guard was largely made up of New Englandcrs, and was first com manded by a New Englnnder. He loved pin, nnd he felt himself snfo when encircled by the swords of a hundred pie-enters. New Englanders have developed the west and have carried the flag nnd the pio to the Pacific. What was sectional has be come national; pie and progress nnd patriotism nre convertible terms. Secretary Busk deies well to encour age pie, strictly ns an administrative measure, for wheat nnd meat, und fruit and berries, nil great products of the field and the orchard, by the alchemy of the kitchen are converted into pie. The Secretary of Agricul ture could do no less than endorse pie, but we believe his endorsement is rather due to the pnrdonnhle pride of the patriot t han the ceild hire thought of the administrator. When the wise Secretary was governor of Wisconsin he put elown the anarch ists with an iron hand. They rewo against law, property and morality. Not one of these men hud ever eaten pie. I mention of The Telescope. Some of the most important dis coveries have been made accidental ly', savs a writer in t.hn Ttiu!r-e k lucky instance of this kind was tho discovery of the invention of the tel escope. . Nearly .100 years ago there vas living in the town of Middleburg, on the island of Walcheren, in the Neth erlands, a poor optician nnmedllans Lippejrsheim. One day, in the year 1G08, ho was working in his shop, his childien helping him or amusing themselves with the tools and objects lyinc ubout, when suddenly his little giij exclaimed: "Oh papal sse how near the steeple comes." Half startled from this announce ment, Hanslooked up from his work, anxious to know the cause of Lis child's excitement. Turning towards her, he saw that she was looking througn two lenses, one held close to her eye the other nt arm's length; nnd calling his daugh ter to his Hide, he noticed that the eye lens was piano-concavc, while tho one held at a distance was piano-convex. Then taking the two glasses, lie ie peatod hisdaughter'sexperimontai d soon discovered that she had chanc ed to bold the lens apart at tho proper focus, and this had produced the wonderful effect that she bud ob served. His quick wit saw in this a won derful diacovery, He immediatelr set about making use of his nw knowledge of lenses, and ere long he fashioned a tube of pasteboard, in which ha set the glasses at ther proper focua, and so tha telescope wan invented. Bam Dickcy, tha down, who baa oftan ast the Hrcus in a roar jW In a Michigan poor bonaa and waa buried in Potter's Said. "Abu! poor York!" - Had Fun With the Passenger. Two young men got on Court Street closed car the other day, ono on the rear nnd tho other on tho front, nnd snt opposite each othor says tho Brooklyn Citizon, und tho half-dozen othor passengers no! iced that each stared rather impudently at each other. "Well, I hopo you will know me the next time you see me," said one. Tho other looked steadily ot the speaker an instant before replying- "Well, I've seen that face of yours before, and I think it was among the pictures of tho rogues' gallery." Epithets and declarations then began to fly rapidly, and the passen gers' interest in the affair began to increase. As the car 'appaoached Carroll Park one suggested to the other that they had better get off and settle tho matter, and tho two arose. Three gentlemen passengers got off with them to koo tho mill. The men walked half a block, followed by the trio of curious passengers; then they linked arms rind laugh ingly sauntered into n, boor saloon. The three passengers realized that they had been sold, but the car had gone too far to be overtaken, anel with a look ol supreme disgust they stood on the corner to wait for the next one. Graadaa's Kigbt The Sheloygan Count plementa the story of the of Elmer Foster, the 7 y in the woods, near Mosin days, with the following "This story of the m been told in many of the here is a story of a p lost in this country nevei til now. She was 73 yerf from the Last, a clergymj the old Calvinistic fuith grims. It was in the yen" October, she said to hei nnd grand-children in thJ Glenbeulah, that she woJ to one of the neighlmrs li the kettle lulls iu (Jreenbi in the afternoem she stoppedonberwnyatthel quaintnnce nnd tarried tJ tramping through the woods she lost her wuv came on, nnd then a sturi snow nnd rain. Shaseii by the snlo en a log and ing finished the journey ol n warm welcome in the i annus in a oen. surround bricks nnd bottles of w only bad result was u sli; for u few da vs. She dip' since, nt the home eif u dJ ing in Kansas, aped some SO. Of course after she the grandchildren had :J questions to ask. ami it these, now in niiddlo life, story to tho News repeir after a few days this loh (who found herse-ll) trot grandchildren were full of particularly little 'Ed,' a He is a big whiskered in a and baby eif his own, now 'Dam ma wui.t you .nione; " 'No, darling, I wn God was with me, (iod is " 'With you down bv tl you slept'." " ' Yes dear.' "Well, why didn't Go the way to the house then "'It, wnsn t his will, d "'Did He cover you was warm, duuiina?' "'I wasn't very cold morning. ' " 'Then what did vou d "I got on in v knees said my lira vers, than for keeping me ull right, I got up on my feet n my way, ami when I g houso I went in an down and thanked God fo me there, and then the around mo nnd took o clothes and put mo in a "But little Ed. wasn't q Hod. 'Why elidn t Go along nil the time with d not let her get lost and fil woods bv a log all night? boy tho question mnaiiJ swored in his timid and for ter as a man it is no ne tion. Why did God let su old ladv get lost n long ti the kettle hills of Greenhtin last month un innocent litt the great north woods?" The New KaltUe. A recent issue of tho Farmington Register, of Oregon, contains a letter from Andrew Saltise, the bond ol the tour d'Alene Indians, asking the saloon men not to soli his peoplo liquor, He says if any of them ore found drunk in town ho would liko to havo the city marshals ancst them nnd send word to him, and ho will go and get them nnd pat them in his jail. Ho also talks to tho county clerks obout estrnys, and says his peoplo lose many horses. Ho closos by saying: " want to lie at peuce with all tho .whites, nnd would like to have tbf7 whitea me my people as they use fne another." It is but a few years ahca Haltiso rodent the head of tbi Ccour d'Alene warriors and waa a sivaga chief tent ondstroylng tha hita. Now ha fatherly Interaatjb bla tribe nnd A Hog That Walls for "A Mr. W. S. Wells, of Wit I'n., is the possessor of a black nnd white cocker spoil for intelligence is not surj nnv doc in tho state. Evin ing, as soon as Boss hears ter stirring, he brings his after which ho scamper to porch for tho morning pap being careful to close the & him. Boss never thinks o fr.r the niirht without first nrnvera. Ho nliices his fro! on a chair, bows revcrentl his eyes and nothing but pronounced by his master him to cease his devotions Ono evening its Mr. Wellf in!? the house for the night in with whn t his in aster supH a bono, but when ordered o refused to obey, and insists livenng to Mr. veiis wnm his mouth. Unon cxr.min Wells found, to his great nnt. a bone, but his spect case that he had dropped M in the barn while nttenum lirru Kniu in not for Sul dolphia Press. kSNDinSr tham atm - j" :. 17 una wan to d town m a comfoi hind a good palol horses it. Ha is thrif. and ridaa intn ible carriage be- 'Jij Wife's Hrldge AtTokin. Jnr.an. isafinl ..nllofl .t?iiiii:l-lt:lHrii. "M Bridge." The name has a oritrin. A brave general quelled a rebellion inanothel tho empire was hastening account of the receipt of 0 that his wife was dangerd On the last day of hishurri ,ho found his course borr bridgeless river, nnd when sj ' nn.l nnvlnlia wnit in! 1)0 ml find a boat to cross hi, and hv iniiuinfir benrinff tit ings that his denrly-loved 1 I.. . .Il .1 I, I,n zioll'd press her hand for tlio Inst H sav adieu. "My wife coumi 1 ' n ...... ..11 11, e thf Mir 11117, nn 1111 wi'v - i ' - - .. I.I ItifTIHefi wurrmr weiuiu iru os he stood there as if frozei ahock. His soverign, too compassion for the blow wt isuen upon mm wane n"v j for hia country, oriercd a be built at tha snot and Adsumo-RashL But the that it coat tha monarch ainoa a lot of paper manufactured capecially h 01 ma topi Ml, ,. 1 filfU 1 Cia" kec P1