MR. BLAINE'S SPEECH FULL TEIT OF TEAT MUCH OUOTEI AND DISCUSSED DOCUMENT. HE WAS FOR SOUND MONEY ft Wu Delivered la Ik* Called Mat« dents Psbrasry 7, IS7S, and Wat Against the Tree Colssgs of Sil ver at Id to 1—The Amsrl «at Policy Powerfully and Clearly Meted. The following It the much quoted dperch In full delivered bv Jamet O. Blaine in the United .States Senate February 7, 1878, in opposition to a House bill (pr the free and unlimited coinage of silver at in to I. Tho com mercial valua of silver at that time was U2 cants per ounce: Mr. President: The discussion on thequestfon of remonetizing silver hut been prolonged nnd exhaustive. I may not expect to add much to lit tslue. but 1 promise not to add much to itd length. I ahull endeavor to cou aider facta rather than theories, to dlate conclusions rather than argu ments. 1 believe gold and silver coin to bo the money of the constitu I Ion—indeed, the money of the American people anterior to the constitution, money which the organic law of tho republic recognized us independent of Its own existence. No power was conferred on Congress to declare thut either metal should not bo money. Congress bss, therefore, in my judgment, no j/'/wwi uvm'/iivti/.v atiicr i nan to demonetize gold, no mure power to demonetize either then to demonetize both. In this statement I am but re peating the weighty dictum of the 0i*t of constitutional lawyer*, "i am certainly of the opinion,' said Mr, Webster, "that gold and ailver, a( rates fixed by Congress, constitute the legal standard of value in this coun try, and that neither Congress nor any •taw has authority to establish any other standard or to displace this •tandard." lew persona can he found, 1 apprehend, who will main tain that Congress lias the power to demonetize both gold and silver, or that Congress could be Justified in prohibiting the coinage of both; and yet in logic and legal construction it would be difficult to show where and yvliy the power of Congrose ever silver is greater than over gold—greater pver either than over both, if, there fore, silver has been demonetized, 1 tm in favor of remonetizig it. If its oinage has been prohibited I am in favor of ordering it to be resumed. If it baa been restricted, i apt in favor of .ordering it lo be enlarged. IVliat power, then, lias Congress over gold and silver? It has the ex cluilve power to coin them, the cxclu *tve power to legulate their value— **ry Ifrest, very wise, very necessary power, for the discreet exercise of which a critical occasion has now • rijen. However men may differ about causes and processes, all will admit that within a few years a great disturbance lias . taken place iu the relative value of gold aud ailver, and that silver is wortli less or gold is worth more in the money markets of the world in 1S7R than in :S73, when the further coinage of silver dollars was prohibited in this country. To remonetize it now as though essential conditions hail not changed, i* will fully and blindly to deceive ourselves. If our demonetization were the only cause for the decline in lue value of ailver. then remonetization would he Its proper and effectual cure, iiut oilier causes, beyond our control, Jiave been far more potentially opera tive than the simple fact that Con gress prohibited its farther coinage. .AsHegislators u-e arc bound to take -cognizance of these causes. The de monetization of silver in the Herman -empire and the consequent partial, cis+well nigh complete, suspension of coinage in the Hatin union, have been tht leading causes for the rapid de cline in the value of silver. 1 do uot think tlie over supply of silver has -I - •* ••■CUV UIIIUI causes, an appreciable inllucncc In t-lijB decline of its value, because its over supply with respect to gold in these latter years, has not been so great as was the over supply of gold with respect to silver for many years afler the mines of California and Aus tralia were opened; and the over sup ply of gold from these rich sources did not affect tnr relative positions nod uses of the two metals in any l^uropean enjn'-y, Free ( ulnae* Alan* Itapo-Mllilx. I believe, then, If tiermniiy were to remonetize silver nud the kingdoms • ml states of the !,atiu I mou wne to reopen its mints, silver would ut once resume Us former relation with gold, 'l’fie Kuruprnu countries, when driven to full remonetisation, as I believe they will be in the end. must of neces •Uy adopt their old ratio of 1,1of •User to 1 of gold, and we shall then be com| died to adopt tiie saute in •u>ad of our former latio of In to >, If we tali to do this we shall, as be fore lose our silver, which like all things else, seeks the highest matkel, • ml if fifteen and a half ounces of •i|v«r in Kuro|H* will buy ns much gold In I.a rip* as sisieeN ounces in Ainet Ice. the silver, of course, will go to flump*. Hut nur line of policy in a Joint movement with other natwias to reumnet ae is simple end direct t he filki slt problem is whet we shell do when we alio to leedehUsii surer Wthc ml the v-r operation uf tlmopeeu ■powers and really as eu advance movement to coerce these iMiwvrs ieiu tke seme policy brideully the Nr*t futile ut prudence * to yum such • •fuller ns will nut nnly do justice nmong our «ttia*n* et home, but will proven protection an nbsofntn b«> rh end* against the gofd mun->useinlcsta pi f.uropn. who, whenever the oppor tunity -'flers wifi uniehly dinw trum pa the |!>ci uom.i#*< uf gold cu>m whwh me non he'd If we mis a sliver iol S' et full legal tender obviously ri. w -he -u-reni *a ue uf the gelt utter wu a>e simpy eeeemg ue* doors and inviting Europe to take onr gold. With ojr gold flowing out from l us ws shall be forced to the single standard and our relations with the I leading commercial countries of the I world will not only be embarrassed, | but crippled. The question before Congress then —sharply defined in the pending House bill—is, whether it is now safe and expedient to offer free coinage to the silver dollar of I V)< grains, with the mints of the Latin union closed and Oermany not permitting ailver to be coined as money. At current rates of silvex, the free coinage of a dollar containing 412.1* grains, worth in gold about 22 cents, gives an illegitimate profit to the owner of the bullion, en abling him to take 22 cents' worth of it to the mint and get it stamped as coin and force his neighbor to take it for a full dotlar. This is an unfair advantage which the government has no right to give to the owner of sil ver bullion, and which defrauds the man who is forced to lake the dollar. It assuredly follows that if we give free coinage to the dollar of inferior value, and put it in circulation, we do •o at the expense of our better coin age in gold; and unless we expect the invariable experience of other nations to be in some mysterious way sus pended for our peculiar oeneflt, we inevitably lose our gold coin. It will flow out from us with the certainty and with the force of the tides (fold has indeed remained witli us in con siderable amount during the circula tion of the inferior currency of the legal tender, but '.hat was because there were two great uses reaerred by law for gold —tlic collection of cus toms and the payment of interest on the public debt. Hut if the inferior silver coin is also to be used for these two reserved purposes, then gold lias I tin tin tfi hint! it. In u« VYliuf imiti therefore, should we make for the circulating medium, if on opening the gate foi ailver to flow in. we open u still wider gate for gold to flow out? If 1 were to venture upon u dictum on the ailver question 1 should declare that I'otil Europe remonetizes silver we cannot afford to coin a dollar ua low a* 412■) grains. After Europe re monetizes ori the old standard, we cannot afford to coin a dollar above ■ 00 grains if we coin too low a dol lar before general remonetization, our gold will leave us. If we coin too high a dollar after general remoneti zation, cur si! ver will leave us. It is only an equated value before and after gencrul remonetization that will preserve both gold and silver to us. Uuld and Hllrer Mast Be Kept K.r standard of value as it now esist, wo ineur ail lb# tvd vnnsequencee of fattwis at home and the ee.t « etv of te-wesafal opposition abroad. Wo are, and sbal be, the greatest producers of allver it the world, and we have a larger staki In ita complete remonetization that any other country. The difference tc the United States,between the general acceptance and the general destruc tion of silver as money in the com merciai world, will possibly withis the next half century equal the entire bonded debt of the nation. But, tc gain this advantage, we must make it actual money, the accented equal of gold In the markets of the world. Uemonetization here, followed by general remonetization in Kurope, will secure to the United States the most stable basis for its currency that we have enjoyed, and will effect ually aid In solving all the problems by which our financial situation la surrounded. Bimetallic sod Mono- Met allln Htsndards. On the much-vexed and long-mooted question of bimetallic anil monometal lic standard, my owu views are suf ficiently Indicated in the remarks I have made. 1 believe the struggle now going on in this country and in other countries, for a single gold standard, would, if successful, pro duce disuster m the end throughout the commercial world. The destruc tion of silver as money, and the estab lishment of gold us the sole unit of value, must have a ruinous effect on all forms of property except those In vestments which yield a fixed return in money. These would be enormous ly enhanced iu value, ar.d would gain a disDroportioriate, and therefore unfair, advantage over every other species of property. If. as the most reliable statistics aflirin, there are nearly seven biilionsof coin or bullion in tlie world, not very unequally divideif between gold anil allver, it is impossible to strike silver out of exist ence as money without results which will prove distressing to millions and utterly disastrous to tens of thous ands Alexander llumilton, in his able and Invaluable report in 17'Jl on the establishment of a mint, declared that Ao annul the use of either gold or silver as money, is to abridge the quautiivof the circulation medium, and is liable to ull the objections which arise from a comparison of the benefits of a full circulation with this evils of a scanty circulation." 1 take no risks in saying that the benefits of a full circulation, and the ev Is of a scanty circulation, are both immeas urably greater to-day than they were when Mr. Hamilton uttered these weighty words, always provided that the circulation is one of uctual money and not of depreciated "promises to pay. ” What Hamilton Said. In the report from which I have al ready nuoied, Mr. Hamilton argues at length in favor of a double standurd, and all the subsequent experience of ninety years lias brought out no clearer statement of the case, or de veloped a more complete comprehen sion of this snhtle and difficult subject "On the whole,” says f#r. Hamilton, "it seems most advisable not to attach the unit exclusively to either of the metals, because this caDnot be done effectually without destroying the office and character of one of them as money, and reducing it to the situa tion of mere merchandise,” Mr. Ham ilton wisely concludes that this reduc tion of cither of the metals to mere merchandise (I again quote his exact words), "would probably be a greater evil than occasional variations in the unit from the fluctuations in the rela tive value of the metals, especially if care he taken to rcgulaUs the propor tion between them, with arj eye to their average commercial value ” 1 do not think that tli's country, hold ing so vast a proportion of the world’s supply of silver in its mountains and its mines, can afford to reduce the metal to the "situation of mere mer chandise.” If silver ceases to tie used as money in Km ope and America, the mines of the i’ueitic slope will be closed and dead. Mining enterprises of the gigantic scale existing in this country cannot be carried on to pro .. i.i . #.. •_ _ . . • ■ • " »»»•» »w»o. ui*< i'/ uiauu ■ | lecture cream pitchers ami sugar bonis. A source of incalculable wealth to this entire country is destroyed the moment silver is permanently disused as money. It is for us to check that tendency, and bring the continent of Europe back to the full recognition of the value of the metal as a medium of exchange. Kill of Inferior !>•>liars The question of boginn.ng anew the coinage of silver dollars has aroused much discussion as to Its effect on the public credit. The sen ator from Ohio (Mr. Matthews* placed this phase of 'he subject in the very forefront of tiie debate insisting, prematurely and lllogicaiiy. J think, on a sort of judicial construct on in advance, by a (•ncurreut res dulion, of a certain law in ease (hat law should happen to be passed by < on gress. My own view on this question can be staled very briefly. I odieve the public creditor can afford to be paid in any ailrer dollar that the I lilted States can a fiord to coin and Circulate. We hare Ifli ,uoo ooo.ooo of property in this country and a wise self-luterest will not permit us to overturn Its relations by seek ng for au inferior dollar wherewith to settle the honest demands of any creditor. The question might ha dlffe ent from a merely selfish pulut of * ew if, on paying the dollar to the puhlle credit, or. Il would disappear after perform intr that fuuctiua. Hut the trouble ia that the inferior dollar you pay the pubtte creditor remains >u circulation, to llte eieluskoa of the betie dollar' That which you pav at home wifi stay here, that which you send abroad will come bach 'I he lulerest .»* tIt. puh Ike creditor la Indissulublv UiuuX up with the lulerest of the whole people W he'etrer effects him affect* us alt, and the evil that we wight tafiiet up hint hy nay tug an tafertor duller would recoil uimii us with a (ees'eaaee a* manifold as the aggregate wealth of the Hepuhite t< auseetods tha rum parativel. sai l limits of oar loaded debt Memewhstr that our aggregate wealth is always >ui resting sad our homtsd daht steadily fro* leg lasa If is I la a gsnwl s |*er dollar the t- >adholder has uoih ug to complete of If pa d l« aa afer or dollar, he bat tha sswe gr e*a«#» that will he U As red still w*re pa at.veiy hy tha holder of tha legal leader uotea aad of the uatioaal haah bdl, hy the pea • • aer hy tha day laborer, aad hy the aoaaWesa boat of poor, w i. ■* st line with ns always, and on whom the mot distressing effect of inferior mcne will be ultimately precipitatec Otrminj Destroyed Miser Hut I must say, Mr. President, thi the specific demand for the payraer of our bonds in gold coin, and in noli ing else, comes with an ill grace froi certain quarters. European critieisi ia leveled ngainet us, and hard narat are hurled at us across the ocean, fo •imply daring to state that the lette of our laws declares the bonds to b payable in standard coin of July It 1&T0; explicitly declared so, and d< dared so In the interest of the publi creditor, and the declaration insertet in tho very body of the $400,000,000 a bonds that have been issued since tha date. Keyond all doubt, tho ailve dollar was included in tiie standart coins of tiiat public act Payment a that time would have been acceptabl and as undisputable in silver as ii gold dollars, for both were equal!; valuable iu the European as In thi American market. Seven-eighths o all our bonds owned out of the conn try are held in Hermany and Holland Hermany has been forced thereby l< suspend its coinage, since the subject of both powers purchased securities The Herman empire, tlie verv yeai after we made our specific decluratlot for paying our bonds iu coin, passed u law destroying, so far as lay in iti power, the value s ,ib lisluucnt of silver as money. When that general re-establishment shall be effected with the coinage of fover grains the dollar which 1 ain now ad vocating will not cause loss or embar rassment to any one. The miner of the ore, the owner of the bullion, the holder of the coin and the govern ment that issues it, will all in turn be b nefitted. It will yield profit, on re coinage and will be advantageously employed in our commercial relations with foreign countries. Meanwhile it will insure to our laborers ut home a full dollar’s pay for a dollar’s worth of work. The American laliortt. I think we owe this to the American laborer. Kver since wo demonetized tlie old dollar we have been running our mints at full speed, coining a new silver dollar for the use of the Chinese coolie and the Indian pariah—a dollar containing l!0 grains of standard sil ver, with its superiority over our an cient dollur ostentatiously engraved on its reverse side. To those “out side barbarians” we send this su perior dollar, bearing all our national emblem*, our patriotic devices, our pious inscriptions, our goddess of liberty, our defiant eagle, our federal unity, our trust iu Ood. This dollar contains 7‘* grams more silver thsu the famous “dollar of the fathers." proposed to he recoiued by the pending bill, and more than four times a* many of these new dol lar* have already been coined a* ever were coined of all other silvor dollars In the I'nited Mate*. In the rscep tmnal u*d abnormal eoudltton ol ilia silver market now dieting throughout the wsirld we have felt compelled to Increase the weight of the dollar with which we carry on trade with the heathen nation* of A«ls shall we do lees lor the American laborer at home? N ff> tent la their teputattoa *n>t cut reuvy t h-'Ugkout I he eum me ratal world It will read strangely In history that the weightier and more valuable of these do!tar* i* mad* for *u ignorant class of heathen labor** t tu i kme and India and that the lighter *ud valuable >t made fur tae intelligent a** l educated lab-** tng oiau wl o Is a eitisea of the 1‘eileJ a ale* t hanty, the adage say*. l-eg*es at buiMg t hanty, the independent Aateroaa laborer ivetsv to ash bat he ha* the f.ghl to demand that jnstten shield t*,g a at k»me. la h*s ***m>-eitd in the name ol summon seas* and , „m m -a hoaestv, I ash that the American ••mgr*** will sot force upon the A n*’*e laborer a* infat-m dtdlSf it which the naked and famished tabor jr era of India and ChiDa refuse to ac cept. The bill which I now offer aa a sub stitute for the bouse bill contains t three very simple provisions: t Offer* n Kabtlltals 1 1. That the dollar shall contain «25 grains of standard ailver, shall have " unlimited coinage, and be an unlim * ited legal tender. r Z l'iiut all the profits of coinage ahall go to the government, and not to R the operator in ailver bullion. ^ 3. That silver dollars or silver bul lion, assayed and mint-stamped, may be deposited, with the assistant treas urer at New York, for which coin cer tificates may be issued, the same in 1 denomination as United States notea, r not below fill), and that these shall be I redeemable on demand in coin or bul t lion. We shall thus secure a paper $ circulation based on un actual deposit , of precious metal, giving us notes as , vuluable as those of the Hank of Kng , laud and doing away at once with tbo f dreaded inconvenience of silver on ac count of bulk uud weight. 1 do not fail, Mr. President, to ree , ognize that the committals and avow ! ala of Senators on this question pre clude the hope of my substitute being adopted. I do not indeed fall to recognize that on this question I am not in Hue with either extreme—with those who believe in the single gold standard or with those who by pre mature and unwise action, as I must regard it, wotild force us to tne single silver standard. Either will be found, In my judg ment, a great misfortune to our country. We need both gold and silver, and we can have both only by making each the equal of the other. It would not be difficult to show that in the nations where both have been fully recognized and most widely dif fused, the steadiest and most continu ous prosperity bus been enjoyed—that true form of prosperity which readied all classes, but which begins witn the day laborer whose toil lays the founda tion of tlie whole superstructure of wealth. The exclusively gold nation !ike England in»y show the most mas sive fortunes in the ruling classes, hut it shows also the most helpless and hopeless poverty in the humbler walks of life. 1'lie gold and silver nation linn itvuit nn rjimm no such iuui vicinal fortunes us abound in a gold nuilon like England, butlthusa peas antry whose sliver savings can pay a war indemnity that would have beg gared the gold bunkers of London,and to which the peasantry of England could not have contributed a pound sterling in gold or even a shilling iq silver. Against Cheap Mousy. The effect of paying the labor of this country in silver coin of full val ue, us compared with irredeemable puper, or as compared even with silver of inferior value, will make Itself felt even in a single generation to the extent of tens of millions, perhaps hundreds of millions,in the aggregate ravings which represent consoli dated capital. It is the instinct of man from the savage to the scholar—developed in childhood and remaining with age — to value the metals which in all lands arc counted "precious.” Excessive paper money leads to extravagance, to waste, to want, as wu painfully wit ness today. With abounding proof of its demoralizing and destructive effect, we hear it proclaimed in the hulls of Congress that "the people de nis nil cheap money." 1 deny it. 1 i declare such a phrase to be a total misapprciiuns on—a total misinter pretation of me popular wish. The pceple do not demand cheap money. They demand an abundance of good ‘ money, which is an entirely different thing. They do not want a sin gle gold standard that will exclude silver and benefit those already rich. They do not want an inferior silver standard that, will drive out gold and not help those already poor. They want both metals, in full vuiue, in equal honor, in w hatever abuudaruo the bountiful eurtli will yield them to the searching eye of science and to the barn baud of labor. i he two metals nave existed Hide by title in harmonious, honorable com panionship as money, ever since intel ligent trade was known among men. It is well nigh forty centuries since ••Ahrahaiu weighed to Kphron the silver which he had named in the audience of the sons of Holli, four hundred shekels of silver, current money with the merchant." Since that time nations huve risen and fallen, racos (lave dis appeared, dialects and languages have been forgotten, arts have been lost, treasures have perished, coutinents have been discovered, islands have been sunk in the sea. and through all these changes silver amt gold have reigned supreme us the rep resentatives of values as the media of exchange The dethronement of each ha* been utteiupted in turn, and sometimes the dethronement of both, hut ulwavs in vain And we nre here to-day deliberating anew over the problem which comes down to us from Abraham's time the - eight of thesilver that shall he “current money with the meiehauk" bUUAN HISTORY IN URIEP, Spain colonised the Island In 1611. In 1534 nnd again lu 1664 Havana was destroyed by the French Malanias ess tha first city to fall Into the hand* of lb* lusuigents t'ruaity and injustice to th* native* hae always b*en the creed of the Span iard* The prueeut revolution bsgaa Feb. 14. 1166, when the republic wsn pro- j claimed by Marti The revolution of ls4i lasted t*n years before dpata succeeded la cum promising by promlalai reform* The roaattlnttoa uf t*uhn. modeled | eo that of lbs tuttel t4taiv* was adopt - ed Mepl. 31. IM1 A triangular blue union having a tingle star and Eve sir. pes. three of fed and l*« of While, I* the flag of the . fejmhlit A x»o>kapevt -M* i Eahetmaa peil-M bp * monster tea crap the -Alter 4*y, I and on abb elds el tha vrmuin •** fssitnbd a pair of smutted m ilttmt |H * they more that* la » .« tha guem Ues ALL THINGS WERE PREETOHER. An Indian PrlncMi Who R»v«d and Earaad It* Gratltoda The princess of Wales is not cramped for pocket money, and various other royal ladies have all they want to spend, but the Princess Angellne was probably the only princess In the world who never had to pay for anything or even utter the magic words "Charge It,” says the New York World. The Princess Angellne never had to pay for anything; she could buy all her soul desired—a bill was never sent her nor to her brother nor to any other member of her family, and she was only an American Indian princess. Recently Angellne died, aged at least 100, and It Is supposed con siderably more. She never told her age, for the reason that she didn’t know R. She was tho daughter of old Chief Seattle, the gen tleman after which tho.town of that name is called. Once Seattle was own er of all the territory along the shore of Puget sound, now in the United States. In those days the Duwamlsh tribe was a populous and warlike na tion, and It was while the white set tlers were still weak and scattered that the Princess Angellne did the work that, made her able to trade on her face In the town of Seattle. When the whites began to encroach on the Indians’ hunting grounds the usual friction arose and It was not long before a conspiracy was formed to overwhelm the whites dwelling along the shores of Puget sound at one blow. The Princess Angellne had been kindly treated by the settlers and at the risk of her life set out to the ham let of Seattle to warn them of their danger. The white men, thus prepared, armed themselves for an attack and had no difficulty In repelling their savage f(A They realized the danger they had so narrowly camped, however, and were properly grateful to the Indian woman, which was a bit odd. The citizens of Seattle In a body offered to build her a house and support her in what an fnillun ur/tuiH nnnul/lot- Invnrv ■for the rest of her life. But she pre ferred the free life of the wilderness und went back to her people. Never theless she accepted the freedom of the city of 8eattle, and orders were left at all the shopc that she should have whatever she look a fancy to, no matter what the cost might be. The richest men of the town stood ready to defray the hills. m. Thus the Princess Angeline gradually became a public character and a living monument to what is said to be ex tremely rare—the gratitude of a city. Her face was familiar to every one in the northwest. It was stamped on spoons, used for advertising purpose* and on every article In the nature ol a souvenir of Seattle and the vicinity. During the last few weeks of her life ’ she suffered greatly, but would submit to no medical treatment. She fought so desperately when an attempt was made to take her to a hospital that It had to be given up. Her life, which with care might have been prolonged, f was thus sacrificed by her suporstltlons, ' A Hitch at the Koval Wedding'. What caused the archbishop of Can terbery and the bishop of Winchester a very had quarter of an hour’s anxiety took place at Buckingham palace on Wednesday immediately before the royal wedding, and the contretemps might have had a very serious result. We have made every inquiry, and we learn that the following Is the true story: Both the archbishop of Canter bury und the btahop of Winchester for warded their clerical robes early on Wednesday morning to Buckingham palace, directing them to he sent to the robing room which had been set apart for the assembly of the clergy and where they were to dress for the wedding service. The two high dig nitaries of the church arrived In good time In order to robe, hut n*t a vestige of their surplices or other canonicals could be found. The archbishop was extremely anxious, and so also were all the pulace officials, and the time wa« drawing nigh for the clergy procession to the chapel, and yet the missing lawn was not to be found. At last Lord Ed ward Pelham Clinton was informed of the impending catastrophe, and he at once set a complete army of court offi cials to search every room In list* for the missing robes. Three wero ey^to ually found In another room, but mil Just In time for the archbishop and bishop of Winchester to drees and hurry to the < li ipel. The other clergy had brought their vestments with them ami so were ready long before the nine, i ne archlilahop. It |g entit, Wa« v«ry much upoei by the rontrotemp*. Some servant or another, not knowing the robing room, had placed the port manteau bearing the rube* In the wrong room Loudon Chronicle »h» Wheel |> the Afmj The bicycle will mioii be pui to proc. Ileal leal In ihe army A detachment of eight men of the Twenty-lifth in fantry h*a Iwcn mounted on wheel* and In charge of a lieutenant will ride over the Montana trail* A bicycle ie pair thop haa been eetabllahetl at p'ort Mueoui* where the men are atatluaed and i he Inatructioa la regard to riding Include* leawin* |n repairing under an evpert bb ycle mechanic. The wheel Will be thoroughly levied In rapid amp, teyante of nowaage. fro*, )i wtul* to oih.r fort*. »|,h r lay ptali.e .M*» with rtSea. blank •t# and abetter lent*, rand patrolling and rwconuolaewnce A V elite da ltd ford What did ah* n.. »'“* iul'* bet you were a tutor la You • M.rtm. t.hed m. if 14 ^btn, part, ner friend. .... , op. Truth *