-it- kv. m.t ij.'a !... fti f I ij l - nnrfu ii'j(UM m f -- - - Lc-xSr'W' ST3. sg - scr fj,-. 'liyiisji pitfttfliit,,limmmmwTmm.9 "yy'" Swj,&v - T ft '"5L- .- X E -J. &' L ifi ., ' -Tap- m .-, " Fy-- -ts V-I y (i i t ?iy Jf he JRio Cloud Chief IJKIIMY, '0V. :J8fi88. A.O. HOSMER - - Proprietor Agricaltaral Item. The Iowa Homestead say: The farmers of Iowa have yet to learn how little-corn is really needed to product lirst-class meats, whether beef or pork, where there is abundant grass and hay. Eastern farmers look at us in a kind of a dazed wonderment when we talk of feeding 100 bushels of corn to one ntcer or twenty bushels to a pig during their natural liven, and we laugh when we Bee their picayune corn-cribs. The fact is, they understand themselves and we dftn't. Maturity of stock has been hastened by good breeding, says the New York Times. . That is, a pig or a sheep which matured at three years, or a steer which was ready for slaughter at five years formerly, is now ready for the butcher nt less than half these "ages. Tigs are said to be ready for pork at nine months, wethers for mutton at twenty months, and ?. steer at two years, though it is feared that these are greater than may be justly allowed. The New York milk law provides that "ever' butter or cIiccm; manufac turer, except those who buy all the milk they use, shall keep a correct ac count of all the milk daily received, and of the number of pounds and pack ages of butter, the number and aggre gate weight of cheees made each day; which account shall be open to inspec tion to any person who delivers milk to such manufacturers." A contributor to the Prairie Farmer says that he had over 200 hogs, and had lost half of them by hog choh-ra. lie then dipped cars of corn in Carolina tar, besmearing them, and threw them among the hogs. They ate it greedily, and in a week all were on the road to recovery. Another remedy he had .suc cessfully used is that of feeding corn in the ear, which has been charred black. A. B. Allen states that he finds wheaj bran an unprofitable feed for swine. They do not seem to possess the power of digesting it, consequently much of it passes through them only partiallv assimilated. If mixed with corn meal it does better, and can be fed with advantage to cattle, along with cut hay, if mixed with it and well wetted, as it then undergoes a second mastication. American farmers find that turnips or ruta-bagas leave the land clean from weeds, but much less ferlilo than be fore they were grown. English farm ers sa' the turnip is a renovating crop, but it is so only by feeding the crop on the ground where it U grown, together with' much grain or oil meal. Soot is one of the most valuable of fertilizers, and should be carefully saved. That from coal is superior to that from wood. It is rich in nitrogen, and benefits all crops to .which it may be applied, as well as being an excel lent remedy against the attacks of many kinds of insects. Remember that a bran mash once or twice a week will be greatly relished by your horses and it will to them good, says the National Stockman. It is cheap, easily prepared, aud should bo used frequently in ever' stable. A California bee keeper takes tho position that no plant makes a better pasture for bees than alfalfa clover. The honey made from it, he says, is almost equal to that mado from whito clover. Canadian mutton sells for as much as beef. It is of better quality than that generally grown in the United States. The Troy Times says the light Brah ma fowls combine more good qualities than any other breed. The annual receipts of small fruits in Chicago are estimated at over 1,000,000 bushels. It is now recommended to pack eggs in well-dried ashes, to keep them fre&h. It is easier to fatten stock in moder ate than in cold weather. Eugenic Among tho Dying If a dire scourge visits England shall we see respected tho example of unpre tending heroism given to our royal family ny neighboring potentates? Will the heme of rlanover emulate the old house of Savoy, or even the courage of the imperial parvenuc, Eugenie? Will Queen Victoria, from tho safe seclusion of Balmoral or Osborne, limit her pi ous ministrations to the sending of ex tra copies of her Highland books to tho cholera-stricken patients as a potent opiate to dull their pain, as in the case of tho wounded Egyptian soldiers at. Netley hospital, or will she from her preserves give them an additional brace of grouse or from her larder a heavier baron of beef? We scarcely doubt that, but we dae not hope to seo her shaking hands with the dying, and imparting by word and touch comfort and hope. It is for such as King Ura berto, the gallant son of the soldier king, neither politician nor statesman, erhaps, but bravo and simple as all lis race, to stand under the still smok ing and trembling ruins of an earth quake, or to visit the reeking wards and ascend the ladders of pestilential garrets; just as his sister, Queen Pia of Portugal, then a youthful bride, smoothed the pillows of tho. fever pa tients in Lisbon, and as the ex-empress of the French in 18G7 knelt by the pal let of a cholera-stricken man in the hospital at Amiens, and pressed his dying hand. "Thank you. my sister," he murmured half unconsciously, mis taking her for one of the nurses. 'It is not a Sister," whispered the nun in his ear, "it is our empress come to visit us." "Do not correct him," said Eugenie promptly, "he can not give me a nobler name." That same day she moved toward a closed door. The head surgeon in at tendance begged her not to cross it, as it led to the small-pox ward, and to some dangerous cases. "Let me seev them," she said, "they suffer, too,1' and entered. She had as little care for her beauty as for her life, and the crowd outside recognized the abnegation of tho wo man as well as the bravery of the sov ereign, and she was well-nigh carried in triumph to her carriage, and her at tendants, when they disrobed her. . found that the hem Of "her garments had been cut and carried off as relics. With the faults and failings of her nature and education, faults that hastened, per hap, the fall of her short-lived popu larity, she had tho reckless intrepidity 1 h , -. '?, ! the inuonnt- AN JPNGLNEKUING WOVDKKe tMMCt Ml til Art KMITMM m ' - - - Nearly Stb MIli "g J ThVtunncr gate is iraposto Luc the whole of the tunnel it is eight me ters broad and seven meter high, and fr.inrrf in Vurht (Tar crranUe. upon whfeb is carved an Austrian imperial j eagle and the emperor's name. For the 1 firfct hundred meters the tunnel forma a curve, but afterwards it pursues its course in one straight line as far an Langen. It is bc.st to take a seat at the right side of the railway car. and then the window may be oiened ami a ..i!.. l.intnra trifl clinu nil the IKrCU- liarities of the intcre-ting construction. I We were at tirt .startled by the hiding j noise m.ncle by tho train in the narrow J vault The smoke winds in dark vol- nrnes along the roofs of the cars, and . .sinks behind the train, suddenly shut ting out the light which had hitherto shown the walls of the tunnel, or had -. ben visible as a convex lentil. Tho engine works with so much steam power that it emits largeh'ops of condensed steam and even Tl4hcs. Large white figures mark the distance at cverv twenty meters. At a height of two meters runs the alarm bell cable. After fiftv meters the walls begin to be damp. At every one hundred meters there is a niche for the guard the niche at three hundred meters contains a .sig nal lantern which can be managed by means of a cable reaching from the sta tions at either end of the tunnel. At every kilometer, that is even- one thou sand meters distance, there is a niche twice as deep as the signal-light niche-, containing a signal bell, of which the whole tunnel contains eleven. There is also a marble slab commemorating the emperor's first visit to the tunnel. Be tween the fifteenth and .sixteenth hun dred meters the rain falling uninter ruptedly is louder than the noise of the engine. The rain is caught in pipes and conducted into a canal under the tunnel, which has six fountains of delicious water, whose cool waves re duce the temperature of the tunnel to 13 degrees Reaumur. When the wind comes from the west and the day is clear, it is possible to see the light of day on the western side, called' the "Star of Langen," immedi ately after the fourth kilometer. It is, indeed, but a small star, viewed at the distance of six thousand meters. The highest point of the tunnel is now reached, and the time for economizing steam lias come. Later, on when the descent is rapid, the steam is used to prevent the engine from going too fast. From the highes point the train's rap idity increases in an alarming manner and were it not for the never-failing vacuum brake it would not be safe to continue at this rate. At five thousand meters a slab commemorates the day when the two halves of the tunnel met, and the thin partition which separated them was knocked through in the pres ence of several members of the govern ment. Three kilometers before Langen the walls are again damp and the water falling from the roof of tho vault is sometimes so abundant that curiosity is rewarded by a shower-bath. We now begin to feel the magic influence of the light of day. Tho wall and the ground beneath us'catch it in stripes and cir cles and we are under tho mistaken impression that the snow surrounds us on all sides. At last we clearly seethe round opening of the tunnel gate, across which runs the dark blue ot tho Alllenz bridge. A shrill sound of the whistle, and we have finished our jour ney through a tunnel measuring 10,332 meters, which we should take two hours to walk through, and which the train traversed in twenty-four minutes. We all drew a breath and felt happy to bo on the surface of the earth once more. As we view the bright scene at Longen .station, wo cannot help pitying the guards of the tunnel, doomed to live a life in a place where no ray of the sun ever penetrates, in gloom and heat and bad air. Happily nature herself venti lates the tunnel, so that no artificial ventilation is necessary. Tin tunnel was commenced in No bor, 1880, and completed exactly three years afterwards, on the 19th of No vember, 1883, when the thin partition in the center was knocked through, and the brave hands that had toiled at so hard a task met in a hearty grasp. The tunnel workers were all dismissed long ago, and only a very few privileg ed ones witnessed the opening of the line of trallic which their combined la bor completed in such an astonishingly short space of time. Even tho dwell ings which they inhabited and mado merry with their noisy southern fun, are bejrinninjr to decav and fall asunder. At the inauguration banquet, however, their labors were not forgotten, and those who had lent their brains to the work reminded their grateful guests of the hands which had realized what must to the traveler for many years to come teem a dream. Cor. London News. An Ohio Mouud. An Ohio mound was recently ex plored. It is located near the center of Morgan township, is about fifty feet in diameter at the base and six feet high, the top being a level circlo thirty-live feet across. The investigation showed that the mound was made chiefly of surface soil and formed wholly on top of the ground. At the depth of :hreo feet was found a ring of ashes five feet wide and two feet deep, containing bits of charcoal.' The diameter of the ring is about twenty feet In and about this ring were found human bones that had evidently been burned. Inside this, lying at the Very bottom of the mound on the original soil, were found in a tolerable state of preservation tho skel etons of four full grown persons, one of them a woman, upon whom lay tho bones "of a well-developed infant. The bodies were huddled together without any systematic arrangement. The skulls were of good size .and shape. Only the bones of one showed signs of fire. Philadelphia Press. Carlyle on Daniel AVebster. Carlyle met Daniel Websterat break fast one morning, and has left a por trait of this noticeable politician: "I will warrant him," he says, one of the stiffest logic buffers and parlianientary athletes anyw-here' to be met with in our world at present a grim, tall, broad-bottomed, j'ellow-skinned man, with brows like precipitous cliffs, and huge, black, dull, wearied, and yet un weariablc looking eyes under them; amphorous, projecting nose and the an griestshut mouth 1 have seen any where. A droop on the side of the up per lip is quite mastiff-like magnificent to look upon: it is so quiet withal. I guess 1 should dislike ill to bo that man sjnesrer. However, he is a right A Urcat Uitcttry Thai i daily bringing joy to the limned of tlxiU'amb by saving many of their doar one from tin arly grav, irulv is Dr. Kinc'- New Diruv.trv Uir i-ot.Mirnptiou. rough cohk, swlmin, bronchitis, hav lever, h-s of voir' J tickling io the tiirout.pam in ?ideand , choM, or any di?n.e o( the tbrmii and ' lungB, a positive cure. Guamntrrd ; Trial bottles free at Henry Couk's drug j ptore. LaoscHze ?1.0U. 1 Srv- r Ulrc Up If voti tc uirr'"i: with low o do 1 preHMl p ril. h a of appetite, jren er.il d ii'V, dtrdered b!odf wmU c n titiiMou. hendrtchr, or any discm a b II our '-if ure, by any menu pio cure a bof-'c f Kiecirie Hitter.-. S'oil ui 1 be.fc'iirpiiz'Nl to e the rapid im pnvmn; that wi 1 follow, you will be iu-pired with new life, -trensrh and acivitv will n-tnrri; psiin and mi-cry wi 1 a e; ai d hence or.h yon will re jo c" in the prai-e oi Klectrio Bitter Sold at 50c a bottle by Henry Cook Fin . nil SI'S. That Sons Again How can uw .en y u couh at cv- j ry lresUi7 v. y net a noun oi ur IJijelovs Pos live Cure, and you wi 1 be answered. It eun- cold.-, touirb', consumption, whooping rough, aud all drc:i3'i.f thu hng :"d it will co-t ; on nothing to test if you call at A. LiudievV. S eK Further It is haid mat au old philosopher nought an houc-t man with a lighted I intern, and since humanity has been seckjng au bouc'stii medicine with the lijht of knowledge, it has at leiij.ili found it in Dr. Jones Ked Cloer fonir which cures all diseases of the bloody r moes pimple, and nen promptly hn the liver a urinary organs. Only 50 cents, a bottle, to be "bad of A Lindley. fturklrnV Arnica alv. The best salve in the world for cuts bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, feer sores, letter, chapped hands chilblains, corns and all skin eruptions and positively cures piles, or no pav required. It is gu ran teed to give ,e -feet satisfaction, or money retunde g price 25: per box. - I)rttiike!.nr, or ihe I.ior Habit, can 1 e ciirril by acliainNtorinx lr. Unities' d'olilen Specific. It can be given in a cup of coifee or tea without the knowledge of the per son taking it, effecting a speedy and permanent cure, whet tier the patient is a moderate drinker or alcoholic wreck. Thousands of drunkards have been made temperate men who have taken ihe Golden Specific in their cof fee without their knowledge, and to day believe they quit drinking of their own free will. o harmful etlecth re sult front its administration. Cures guaranteed. Circulars and testimon ials sent free. Address, Goi.nr.N Fpecifk' Co., 185 Kare St., Cincinnati, 0. Curiosities of "Good Tillies." -People do some very funny things jvhen they are drunk. The other irght ( met a noted citizen, wealthy and dig lified, coming out of a saloon with a "jam-bone, picked pretty clean, which fie was gnawing at with drunken con entmeut. He liad removed it from its dace after it had gone through a hard lay on the free-lunch counter. A few venings ago I saw a young gentleman on Kearney street with his necktie up jchind his'ear. a champagne cork, at tached by a string to his collar-stud, tangling gracefully over his shirt-front, ating with great earnestness corn rom its native cob. When it was all licked off he looked at it with tears in lis eyes, murmuring in a low, pathetic oner "The last corn's gone," and Iroppcd it reluctantly into the gutter. Jamoti and Pythias came back to us in he two topers going home in the mid ile of the night. One of them slippetl iver a lowr bank and sank in mud up to lis knees. The other tried to pull him ut, without avail. Finally both gave t up, and Pythias said: "1 will not leave you here alone." He got in beside him and they waited jr daylight and a Good Samaritan. can Francisco Chronicle. Jx.' . ... W3TSnEWKDiK2 iFwbrUrd': ltwtllY'ffltrand enitch the BLOOD, rcanlif 5 the LIVES and KIDNEYS, amlUKSTOiu: the KEAI.TX: and VIGOUof -XOUTK1 lu U tl;os dlseafes reulrlnjtmc'rtalnand eMcjen.TOMC, Lacli of StrcncUi, elc, IU use Is narked w-llh Immediate ai:rt wciideriul resnlU. Bones, r.iu-sclcs ami nervos receive new force. Enliven tUe uilnd and supplies Brabi 1'owcr. a rMr suDerlnc irom all complaints Zm A OliCO peculiar to tliclrscx -will BnUIn X)R.3AaX12iC3 IRON TOK1C n safe anu spt edy cure. It a.reaarlcarand licalHy comidcalon. Tde BtmnKost trstlnibiiy to llie value oi int. fiAKTEit's Iron- Toxic is iliat frcuuent allempts at cocnlerffltl(rliae only added l the popular ltyof theorlplnal. If you ettrtitsilydesln-lu-alta do not experiment pet the Ouu.lNAL aM Bk-aT RStlaU, Maxtor oor DREA3f COCK. 4FulI oT traus and orrfullofjrmatJoa.fxa. OR. KAfTTER'S IRCM TONIO IS FCR SMX Bt M. Co.Pm'a. ArtaUss esssa otjvummiMam.JMlu smksswsratiosMBtas)Uaia w so - m I 1 li tm rm mil la IMMIM I."rT -. r---a.,aa s iiiTTlssnrlilsjaT-J JS"i" I say tSSmStmtvlSk. 3kw.aftsrtkasa otmrtmmxr.Ajmimar,s7Sr mvmSLwimium wpiraaaoBwa uw. ZfTS?SixriZZZ aadsp"Maoiaooti. is api m """- liHntssjfliUssii(T Iwb.lEilahtbeaMatobasetHlgwt? w datai4 yeaaiaaa by rscoauasstdlac yow rassswy. T ortelnal letter from wblch the above Is aa extract, and several hsudred others expressing similar opintena.In equally stroaar tcraas.are on air and will be shown to anyonecaltlnirat osroMces who showa tot his Interest la Uiaaaatter arise purely Xrosa a desire to guard against laapoalnoa. HARRIS REMEDY CO. MPGCIKIMST3. MMtotandsWiSts. ST. LOWS, MO. i'straswBt3. trctfttf .MMiiZ Yean 0METREJ5TMENT -Of Nervous and Seminal Da DMtty, nan oacay Loaa of Msmo. A.au- Ae. COK YWsmFl 1UeBsadrl farScitosaBsswt. Sara Tlssa aad Hester, and arald Qaaekary. BOC rad Trial IVivof KmriMPK. liilim Mekacy. BOOS Pr.T.WTT.T.TaamMnwaakaa.Wla. C ff-4; vt - 2 ;," i .:..- . - -;-.rv j0A THE 0HLY TRUE Ei I jMBkV ins sa9BBsaHf0sBBsBaKl lnfant and Children Wbat dir tr ChiWrm roT cbk. Whal car lklr fef rn. rnaXr IfaTU Vp; t'mxlnri. Klin Jlaltt fm. and err Ut tara. Wh cvrr htr colic. kQIs ibnr otto, Ctnrla. yha.! uttkOtlr ram CooJjprJla. Sour StoaiAci, CMd. Ittdij-stloa : CmMtmrim. Faiwptl thn to Morphln Prrupa, Castor Oil aad I'areoric, .vl llaUCtorla. "Caatari is o c!l adapt4 to CfcUirea that I reeotnaecd it as nperior to any stedi eine known to Boe." II. A. A sea as. M.D 111 So. Oiford St.. Brooklyu, 5. Y. P I III I I Ml" MjIWIMENTI An abeelmta eara tar Hkaal I Wfttitm. Spraima. Paim izs tka (I Q Buck, Btxrss, Galls, 4to. Aais-La H tantaiie-oaa Pais- reliarer. I NEW GROCERY STORE ! Where he fou ml everything in the grocorv line, such an Sugars, Teas, Coffees, Sirups, Fruits, Bacon, Ham, Dried Beef, Cheese and Crackers, Tobaccos, Cigara, Flour, Feed, Glass and (ueeuawnra, and Crockery. Hoping by fair dealing to'mcrit a share of the public patronage. Coaio and seo inc. IN FEATHERLEY'S BUILDING, Opposite he Chicago Lumber Yard. S. V .LUDLOW. C. B. TS aBHC2saavamnS m J-'r!SJ5 aasa" RED CLOUD, NEB. Highest Market Price Paid ! Scan ogle & Son, Dealers In IB hum iplu, mm, SEWING MACHIN ES, c. Bed OIod DO YOU That Mrs. Newhouse, HAS THE LARGEST STOCK OF WHM Dry Goods, DressGoods, Underwear, Laces Etc. Red Cloud ? Well she has and is selling them at bottom prices. See her. Nebraska Lumber Co. DEALERS IJf LUMBER, LATH, SHLXGLFS, SASH, DOOBS, BLIMW 4C. RED CLOUD. FRANKLIN ACArFMY Christian Unscctarian. Five Courses of Study ! ? cademic 4 years, Preparatory 3 years, Normal 3 ycarss, Musical Course, Business Course, w,ing Dcpa,mtt :ii.t.r..i 1-....:.. cr 1: Healthful location, Surrounding moral, Xo S.1J00 , Torino Kcnjon.nl 1 L rary, PhjM-al appanitup, Gcoloi- I cjtl Cabinet, Rending Itooin, itc Instruction horough ! Por Catalogue, addre.. liev. W. Ham don y Principal. ! n3-rnC HOSFORD. G. M. YOUNG. Hosford & Young, DEALERS IX Poultry Produce all kinds of - Neb SNOW d&WjfflrenE1 O Jia! VJitf NEBRA8KA FRED BIRKN Merchant Tailor, Vhh ccrpal mTtiwfi Uilriris ltiJi!, KJ &! a Cassimeres, Worsteds, Meltons, &c. FOR FINE SUITS. Hcd?- hw ow n TAikirjaj:. Catuj niI fritim mad rra hi rpV k Ctve t-iti. faction IfH-. Kvical.'c Ct! p! S 4 hja : Gk1 WV Old Stand, A. II. HROWX ruoriuimm BHOWXTS ; MARBLE AND GRANITE WORKS OFFICE AND YARD.-Opposito Watson's m yvor stable. RedCloud, Nab- Lock box, 3 22 PI.ATT DEALERS I.X COAL LUMBER ETC. Red Cloud, Nebraska. itk WMO IS UMACQUA1NTKD WITH TMI S3K BY IXAMIMIMO Chicaco, Rock Island & Pacific R'Y, Boins; th Orat Central Un. aJTorda to arr&phlcal position, thn 8hortcl and bMt ronXM bstvtaa mm a at, 1 Southeaat, and th West, Korthwrait and aVrntawsat. It ia btarally and atric'Jr trait, that Ita oaa&mcMamm ara aft f ffaa of road between the AtUtnUc and that FactHe By IU main llsa and branches it rvacbAa Chieaca, Blaa lalaj4 aa.. AVa Tun- . Jollat, Zeneca, PeorU, Ottawa. La Saila. 0asaa. XaUaa aa4 JUk UUa4. in Illinois; DTnport, Xascatlna. Waahlnsjtoa. Kaokah, KmrnmrHU, OattaJtxaa, Tairfleld. Dm Molr.;. Wast Liberty. Iowa City. AllaaUa. Armt. aadW. 1 Harlan, Outhria Center and Council Xla. in Iowa; OaUattav TramVsa. Casaaren " and Ka&aaa Cty, in Xlsaocri, and Laverarut aaa Ataaka the hondrada of cltiea. -rillaffa and towaa latanaasUata. Tka "GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE," Aa It ia familiarly called. oSVrrm to traiara all aaraaUa aa4 sasaRass) Incident to a araooth track, aafe brJdaa, Fast Exprsae Traina, cost WKLL HEATZD. FIKELT m. line af thm XOST KAOKIFICXWT FTJLLXAX'S lateat leaijrnd end handaowaat FALACS ULXMTtMO aa4 MVW- TXT CARS, and DiJflu J?"f ?JfTsaa urn aeaJ , be tha FIJtEST XXTX VTOV AXY ftOAD WTHl TOTTafTmT. aa4 uWllux raperlor meaia are aerred at the low rxte of SaTTXM TTFITsl I J1H SACK. TKKEZ TRAIXI each way eawsaCMICAOO aa 'the Ml OtJmM MIT MM. TWO T&AIN1 each war batvaaa CM1CA.OO aa4 MUf MmAFOLU aaA IT. FAXTL, Tia tha faaaana ALBERT LEA ROUTE. Tha Hew and Direct Line, via Seaaaa. WMSaiaa aj rrneanl for boatneaa between tha Was aa4 Vaaaeil BT na'L Indiaaapolia aad Ia Fayetta. aa4 iatarsxediata potasa, ia raaaajy oe Through Cara fcr all Tkxos?h F Wn -,- AtnA lafonaatioa, aaa aa woU aa Ticketa, at all prladpal TJaket ada, or of R. R. CABLE, B. ST. JOHN, Preat Oaml Xaaacar, Oeml TYt CHICACO. F DEALER HA RDWARP Stoves Gasoline Stoves, Tinwaxe, Nail Barbed Wire, and the Largest and Most" extensive line of goods in the valley; v Yoxxr favors respectfully solicited. Prices to atmI tr JYk. Red Cloud, Neb DC. MEYER m fc FBBBS. rr J. S. EMIGHtl DENTIST, M RED CLOUD, HEBIISKA. Fhii 0 )l re. Work a Specialty. tVuil .XaMotuU lUfta. CKOQAMV OT THU tXHHfTaTV THtt tSA, THAT TMC trmraiara, hy rvaaea af Ha aaHvsJai Usi ZWaaj at all Cemaaa OAeas m ftha Usilasl l- Cat.- MAM vWeaBaaaiL ffssaassjly asneaas, sjbj FaaaJL aVhsjasaassaasa M m larwaa nmt Tasfwasra PaaaaaaraaB. ammw M WaaB. k. .fca. WAY IX t i- jt 5r T , rk $ 1 ..iaSBBBS jVLi W M- it-? yon forget it. ti: sr rusr ..Vi i .. ??'3 lj-"- is V . Oil. feJt JiT--TJS:.W?KS?-as,Bi-"-J!i ... t- & s'-&r&&2$r '- '- B.TSl'J C T - , fc tuns.. TJT58j iir-T- 3mr ,s9t JV a x : ? a &. -ri " jpE-.! , " Va . 3'2t Vs, k -'""Vy ss-r-.'w ;r -. , -fVrTWjr 2 -" f Y c S&fr' '-' , & a - " " -3e c 3 .ia: .& HX -SMT-1 " ? 1 lis -v i. . w- t' 'V.V J.5 kkSSs-V. -."?- s.-r --- -t:z,.-i l?A ck- - .- . -y -. r a- . Wi )-'& ;tvCt ?3- -"- -'.--aaag rs.st.' Si.-tW-,-- ,- rX - WPirz - - -jsh-Sm in iia in ' i Ltt - fiCSlLllslsrWK - "-l1 Lb --t". 9nBlasse&SaaKBBl V V :. EJSSX UV lju iL L. f . 3V- ?: a ji?. ( ms$ffis&8&m..