Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 24, 1890)
"r,VaC FSSBKFHSBHJSSSiSafrPA-.- ' : . 'if'rk'''-? . o--S --VT jpt , - ia " " ' ' -f-c a t1- :- "" , I it i I2- ! r S ON CALVABTS BROW. Dr. on th Stored Spot Tha following dJeoonne wm delivered by Bev. T. De Witt Talaage at Brook lyn, N. Y., on Sunday. October 12. His text was: "If I forget thee, OJerasslesa, let my right hand forget ber ommaiag. Psalm cxxxvii. 5. He said: Paralysis of bis best band, tbe with ering of its muscles and nerves, is here invoked if tbe author allows to pass out'oTraind tbe grandeurs of the Holy City where onoe he dwelt Jeremiah, seated by the river Euphrates, wrote this psalm and not David. Afraid I am of every thing that approaches impre cation, and yet I can understand bow any one who has ever been at Jerusalem should, in enthusiasm of soul, cry out, whether he be sitting by the Euphrates, the Hudson or the Thames. "If I for get thee, O Jerusalem, may my right band forget her cunning!" You seo, it is a city unlike all others for topography, for history, for significance, for style of population, for waterworks, for ruins, fortoiers, for domes, for ramparts, for literature, for tragodies, for memorable birthplaces, for sepuicbers, for confla grations and famines, for victories and defeats. I am here at last in this very Jerusa lem and on a housetop just after the dawn of tho morning of Decembers, with an old inhabitant to point out tho salien t features of the scenery. "Now," I said, "where is Mount Zion?" "Hero at your right" "Whore is Mount Oli vet?" "In front of where you stand." "Where is the garden of Gothsemane?" N "In yonder valley." "Where is Mount Calvary?" I Jo fore ho answered I saw it No unprejudiced mind can have a mo ment's doubt as to where it is. Yonder I see a hill in the shape of a human skull and the Bible says that Calvary was tho "place of a human skull" Not only is it skull shaped, but just beneath tho forehead of the bill is a cavern that looks liko oyoless sockets. Within the grotto under it is tho shape of the inside of tho skull. Then tho Bible says that Christ was crucified outside the gate, and .this is outside the gate, while the siu formerly selected was in sido tho gate. lics:do that this skull hill was for ages tho place where male factors wore put to death, and Christ was slain as n malefactor. Tho Saviour's assassination took place beside a thoroughfare along which people went "wagging their heads," and there is tho ancient, thoroughfare. I saw at Cairo, Egypt a clay mold of that skull hill, made by tho late Gen eral Gordon, tho arbiter of nations. Whilo Empress Helena, oighty years of age and imposed upon, by having threo crosses exhumed before her dim eyes, '"" as though they wero tho three crosses of Hiblo story, selected another site as Calvary, all recent travelers agree that the ono I point out to you was, without doubt tho scene of tho most terrific and overwhelming tragedy this planet ever witnessed. There wero a thousand things wo wanted to see that thud of December, and our dragoman proposed th s and that and tho other journey, hut I said: "First of all show us Calvary. Some thing might happen if wo went else- hero, and s'eknes or aer.dont might nder our seeing the sacred mou.it If u see nothing else wo must see that and see it this morning." Somo of us in carriage and some of us on mule back, we wero soon on tho way to tho most sacred spot that the world has ever seen or ever will see. Coming to the base of the hill we went inside tho skull of rocks. It is called Jeremiah's grotto, for thoro the prophet wrote his book of lamentations. Tho grotto is thirty-five feet high, and its top and 8 des aro mal achite, green, brown, black, white, red and gray. Coining forth from those pictured sub terraneous passages wo begin to climb tho steep sides of Calvary. As we go up we seo cracks and crevices in tho rocks which I think were mado by the convulsions of nature when Jesus died. On tho hill lay a limestono rock, white but tinged with crimson, tho white so suggostivo of purity and the crimson of sacrifice that I said: "That stone would bo beautifully appropriate for a memo rial wall in mj' church, now building in America, and tho stono now being brought on camel's back from Sinai across tho desert when put under it how significant of tho law and tho Gos pel! And these lips of stono will con tinue to speak of justice and mercy long after all our liv:ng lips havo uttered their last message." So I rolled it down tho hill and transported it When that day comes for which many of you havo prayed the dedication of tho lJrooklyn Tabernacle, tho third immense structure we havo reared in this city, and that makes it somewhat difficult, being the third structure, a work such as no other church was ever called on to undertake wo invito you in tho main entrance of that building to look upon a memorial wall containing tho most suggostivo and solemn and tremendous antiquities ever brought together; this, rent with tic earthquake at the giving of the law 4t Sinai, the other rent at the cruciflx- pn at Calvary. It is impossible for you to realize what our emotions were as we gathered, a group of men and women, all saved by tho blood of the Iamb, on a bluff of Calvary, just wide enough to contain three crosses. I said to my family and friends: "I think here is where stood the cross of tbe impenitent burglar and there the cross of the mis creant and here between, I think, stood the cross upon which all our hopes de pend." As I opened the nineteenth chapter of John to read, a chill blast struck tbe hill and a coud hovered, the natural solemnity impressing the spir itual solemnity. I read a little, but broke down. I defy any emotional Christian man, sitt ng upon Golgotha, to read aloud and with unbroken voice, or with any voice at all, the whole of that account in Luke and John, of which these .sentences are a fragment: "They took Jesus and led Him away and. He bearing His cross, went forth into a place called the place of a skull, where they crucified Him and two others with Him, on either side one, and Jesus in the midst" "Behoid thy motberr "I th.rst" "This day shalt thou be with me in Paradise." "Father, forg.ve them, .tbey know not what they da" "If it be oossible. let this cud dsss from me." kftVhat sighs, what sobs, what tears, what aa u pus is oi sorrow, wnat surging oceans oYagony in those utterances! While we sat there the whole scene came before us. All around the top and tbe sides and the foot of the hill a mob rages. They gnash their teeth and shake their clenched fists at Hiss. Here the cavalry horses champ their bits and paw tbe earth and snort at the smell of the carnage. Yonder a grosp of gam blers are pitching up as to who shall have the coat of the dying Saviour. There are women almost dead with grief ong tne crowd. His mother and His aaat and some whose sorrows He had - comforted and whose guilt He had par dkaed. Here a man dins a snoam iat ear wine and by a stick lifts it to the fceftaaderackedlipa. The aeaterrhaga r - ?H3Saa.wa woaaas has dean ita - vWfe, Xkt laamhMh ii . pJZ jr - IH !!- HCl. aa the world saw never before er si It was not a solar eclipse, sash as astron omers record or we ourselves have seen. It was a bereavement of the heavenst Darker! Until the towers of the temple were bo longer visible. Darker! Until the surrounding hills disappeared. Darker! Until the inscription above the middle cross becomes illegible. Dark er! Until the chin of the dying Lord falls upon the breast, and He sighed with this last sigh the words, "It is tnishedr As wo sat there a silence took' posses sion of as and we thoaght: This is the center from which continents have been touched, and all the world shall he moved. Towards this hill the apostles and martyrs pois tod backward. To this all Heaven pointed downward. To this with foaming execrations perdition pointed upward. Bound it circles all history, all time, all eternity, and with this scene painters have covered tbe mightiest canvas, and sculptors cut the richest marble, and orchestras rolled their grandest oratories, and churches lifted their greatest doxologies, and Heaven built its highest thrones. Unable longer to endure tbe pressure of this scene, we moved on, and into a garden of olives, a garden which in the right season is full of flowers, and here is the reputed tomb of Chr.st You know tho Book says: "In tbe midst of the garden was a sepulcher." I think this was the garden and this the sepul cher. It is shattered of course. About four steps down we went into this, which seemed a family tomb. There is room in it for about five bodies. We measured it and found it about eight feet high and nine feet wide and fourteen feet long. Tbe crypt where I think our Lord slept was seven feet long, I think that there once lay the King wrapped in His last slumber. On some of these rocks the Roman government set its seal. At tho gate of this mausoleum on the first Easter morning the angels roll the stono thundering down tbe hill. Up these steps walked t'le lacerated feet of the Conqueror, and from these heights He looked off upon the city that bad cast Him out and upon the world He had come to redeem and at tbe heavens through which He would soon ascend. But we must hasten back to the city. There are stones in the wall which Solomon had lifted. Stop here and see astartling proof of the truth of prophecy. In Jeromiah xxxi. 40. it is said that Jerusalem shall be built through tbe ashes. What ashes, pcoplo have been asking? Wero thoso ashes just put into the nroDhecv to fill up? No! tho mean ing has been recently discovered. Jeru salem is now being built out in a cer tain direction whero the ground has boon submitted to chemical analysis and it has beon found to be tho ashes cast out from the sacrifices of theanciont temple, ashes of tho wood an 1 ashos of bones of animals. There aro groat mounds of ashes, accumulation of cen turies of sacrifices. Here wo ontor tho mosquo of Omar, a throne of Mohammedanism, where wo wero mot at the door by officials, who bring slippers that we must put on be fore we take a step further, lest our feet pollute the sacred places. A man at tempting to go in without theso slippers would be struck dead on tho spot These awkward sandals adjusted as well as wo could, wo aro led to whero we see a rock with an opening in it through which, no doubt tho blood of sacr.fi co in the ancient templo rolled down and away. At vast expense the mosquo has been built but so somber is the place I am glad to get through it and take off tho cumbersome slippers and step into thy clear air. Yonder is a curve of stone, which is part of a bridgo which onco reached from Mount Moriah to Mount Zion, and over it David walked or rode to prayers in tho templo. Hero is the wailing place of tho Jews, where for centuries, almost perpetually during tho day time, whole generations of the Jews have stood putting their head or lips against the wall of what was onco Solomon's temple. It was ono of tho saddest and most solemn and im pressive scenes I ever witnessed to see scores of these descendants of Abraham with tears rolling down their cheeks and lips trembling with emotion, a book of psalms open before them, bewailing the ruin of the ancient temple and tho captivity of their race, and crying to God for tbe restoration of the templo in all its original splendor. Most affecting scene! And such a prayer as that cen tury after century, I am sure God will answer, and in some way tbo departed grandeur will return, or something bet ter. I looked over tho shoulders of somo of them and saw that tbey were reading from tbo mournful psalms of f David, while I havo been told that this is tho litany which some chant "For tho temple that lies desolate. We sit in solitude aad mourn; For tho palace that is des'royed. Wo hit in solitude and mourn; For tho walls that are overthrown. We sit in solitude and mourn; for our mujexty that is departed. Wo sit in solitude ttnd mourn; For our great men that lie dead. We sit in solitude and mourn; For prlota who hnVj stumbled, W sit In soiiiudo and mourn." I think at that prayer Jerusalem will como again to more than its ancient magnificence; it may not be precious stones and architectural majesty, but in a moral splendor that shall eclipse for ever all that David or Solomon saw. But I must get back to the house-top where I stood early this morning, and beforo the sun sets, that I may catch a wider vision of what tho city is and onco was. Standing hero on tho house top, I seo that the city was built for military safety. Some old warrior, I warrant selected the spot It stands on a hill 2,600 feet above the level of tho sea. and deep ravines on the threo sides do the work of military trenches. Compact as no other city was compact Only three miles' journey round, and tho three ancient towers, Hippicus, Phasaelus and Mariamne, frowning death upon the approach of all enemies. As I stood there on the housetop in the midst of the city, I said: "O, Lord, reveal to me this metre polls of tho world, that I may see it as it onoe ap peared. " No one was with mo, for there are some things you can-see more vivid ly with no one but God and yourself present Immediately tbe Mosque of Omar, which has stood for ages on Mount Moriah, the site of the anoient temple, disappeared, and tbe most hon ored structure of all the ages lifted itself in tbe light and I saw it tho temple, the ancient temple! Not Solo mon's temple, but something grander than that Not Zerubbabel's tem ple, but something more gorgeoas than that It was Herod's temple, built for the one purpose of eclipsing all its architectural predecessors. There it stood, covering nineteen acres, and 10, 000 workmen had been forty-six years in building it; Blaze of magnificence! Bewildering range of porticoes aad ten gateways and double archesjand Cor inthian capitals chiseled into lilies and acanthus. Masonry beveled aad grooved into snch delicate forms that it seemed to tremble in the light Cloisters with two rows of Corinthian eolamns, royal arches, marble stops pare as taoagh made oat of f rosea snow, carving that seemed like a panel of the door of Heaven leVdown and set in the facade of the building on shomlders nt each ad, lifting the glory higher and higher, and walls wherein gold pat eat the sil ver, aad the carbuncle pat ot the gold, aad the jasper pnt eat the earbaacle. nntil in the changing light they weald all seem to cents hade agaia iato a cherasef barmoaiOBS nel-Taetemnel Desalogr la Aathems soaring la rafter at esdarl From side to side foaadattoa tog Uded pinnacle, the prayer of all ages! Froataia hoasetopoa tbe December afternoon we look oat in eaetaerdlree tioa. aad I see the King's palace cover lag lto,) square feet, three rows ef wiadows illamiaiag the inside brill iaace, the hallway wainscoted with all styles of colored marbles, sarmonatoa' by arabesque, vermlllloa aad soli, looking down oa mosaics, amsio ef waterfalls ia thegardea outside answer ing the music of tbo harps thmamed by deft fingers inside, banisters ever whea Princes aad Princesses leaaed and talked to Kings and Qoeeas ascend ing the stairway. Oh, Jerusalem, Jera safcm! Mountain city! City of Godl Joy of the whole earth! Stronger thaa Gibraltar and Sebastopol, Barely it never could have been captured. But while standing there oa the house top that December afternoon, bear the crash of tho twenty-three mighty sieges which have come against Jerusalem in tbe ages past Yonder is the pool of Hezekiah andSiloam, but again and agaia were those waters reddened wlthhaman gore. Yonder are tbe towers, but agaia and agaiaathey fall. Yonder are the high walls, but again and again tbey were leveled. To rob tbo treasures from her temple and palace and de throne this queen city of tbe earth all nations plotted. David taking the throne at Hebron decides that he must havo Jerusalem for his capital, and. coming up from tbe South at the head of 280,000 troops, he captures it Look, here comes another siege of Jerusalem! The Assyrisns under Sennacherib, en slaved nations at his chariot wheel, having taken 203,000 captives in his one campaign, Phoenician cities kneeling at bis feet Egypt trembling at the flash of his sword, comes upon Jerusalem. Look, another siege! The armies of Babylon under Nebuchadnezzar come down and take a plunder from Jerusa lem such as no other city ever bad to yield and 10,000 of ber citizens trudge off into Babylonian bondage. Look, another siege! and Nobuchadnezzar and his hosts by night go through a breach of tho Jerusalem wall, and tbe morning finds somo of tbem seated triumphant in tho temple, and what they could not take away because too heavy they break up the brazen sea snd the two wreathed pillars, Jacbin and Boaz. Another siege of Jerusalem! and Pom pey with the battering rams which 100 men would roll back and then at full run forward would bang against the wall of tho city and catapults hurling the rocks upon the people, left 12,000 dead, and tho city in the clutch of the Roman war eagle. Look, a more desperate siege of Jerusalem! Titus with his tenth legion on Mount of Olives, and ballast ar ranged on the principlo of the pendu lum to swing great bowldors against walls and towers, and miners digging under the city making galleries of beams underground which, sot on fire, tumbled great masses of houses and human be ings into destruction and death. All is taken now but tho temple and Titus, tho conqueror, wants to save that un harmed, but a soldier, contrary to or ders, hurls a torch into tho temple and it is consumed. Many strangers were in tbe city at tbe time and 97,000 cap tives wero taken, and Josephus says 1,100,000 lay dead. But looking from this house top, the siego that most absorbs us is that of the crusaders. England and Franco and all Christendom wanted to capture the Holy Sepulcher and Jorusalom, then in pos session of tbo Mohammedans under the command of ono of tho loveliest bravest and mightiest mon that ever lived for justice must bo dono him though be was a Mobammodan glorious Saladin! Against him camo the armios of Europo under Richard Cocur do Lion, King of England; Philip Augustus, King of France; Tancred, Raymond. Godfrey and other valiant men, marching on through fevers and plagues, and battle charges, and sufferings, as intense as tho world evor saw. Saladin in Jerusalem, hearing of tho sickness of King Richard, his chief enemy, sends him his own physician, and from the walls of Jerusalem seeing -King Richard afoot sends him a horse. With all tho world looking on the armies of Europe come within sight of Jerusalem. At the first glimpse of tho city they fall on their faces in reverence, and then lift an thems of praise. Feu&s and hatred among themsolvos wero given up, and Raymond and Tancrod. the bitterest rivals,cmbraced whilo tbe armies looked on. Then the battering rams rolled, and tho catapults swung, and tbe swords thrust and the carnago raged. Godfrey of Bouillon is tbe first to mount tbe wall and the crusaders, a cross upon every shoulder or breast havo taken the city, march bare-headed and bare-footed to what they supposo to be the Holy Sepulcher. and kiss tho tomb Jerusa lem tho possession of Christendom. But Saladin retook the city, and for the last 400 years it has been in possession of cruel and polluted Mohammedanism! Another crusade is noeded to start for Jerusalem, a crusade in this nineteenth century greater than all those of the past centuries put together. A crusade in which you and I will march. A era sade without weapons of death, but only the sword of tho spirit A crusade that will make not a singlo wound nor start one tear of distress, nor incendiariae one homestead. A crusade of Gospel peace! And the cross again be lifted on Calvary, not as once an instrument of pain, but a signal of invitation, and the mosque of Omar shall give place to a Church of Christ, and Mount Zion be como tho dwelling place not of David, but of David's Lord, aad Jerusalem, purified of all its idolatries, and taking back the Christ sho once cast out shall be made a worthy type of that heavenly city which Paul styled "the mother of us all," and which St John saw "the holy Jerusalem descending out of Heaven from God. Through its gates may we eater whea our work is done, and in its temple, greater than all the earthly temples piled ia one, may we worship Russian pilgrims lined all tbe roads aroand tbe Jerusalem we visited last winter. They had walked hundreds of miles, aad their feet bled oa their way to Jerusaleav Many of them had spent their last farth ing to get there, and they had left some f of those who started with them, dying or dead"by the roadside. Aa aged wom an exhausted with the long way, begged her fellow pilgrims not to let her die until she had seen th Holy City. Aa she came to the gate of the city she could not take another step, bat she was carried in, aad then said: "Now bold my head ap till Icaalooknpoa Jerusalem," and. her bead lifted, aha took one look, and said: "Now I die content 1 haw seen it! I have seea it" Some of as before we reach the heavea ly Jerusalem may be as- tired aa that but angels of mercy will help as la, aad one glimpse of the tomato of God aad the Lamb, aad eaa good look at. the "Kiag ia His beanty" will store compensate for aU the toils aad aad heartbreaks ef the Hallelajah! Amea! Stranger (at Mr. Citimaas nrbea villa) "Morals', my little dear! Is your papa at home? I hear he watte to bey a cow, aad Iva gat oaelthink would salt him. It's Little Miss "Oh, I dea't think ild waat that kind of a deatg4vaaaythiaghatakimaaak. We T., r. aaw tam-imaaa se aeasa am ' laanv.-W. i,jwswj, uasw - j . ' -- Maitaw am iMiansawaiaawkjmawLarw Bo --- - - -- . -.-. swsa, A.. l - sa sa . - aa aa as 'asis aanaamawakaswaw at aw - -- " .- .-'a -saBsasas ssswsssv m-mm- aa bbswswsbbsjb) sss-sbbsf w t wassvsssssasi vn-wBar -- - . , .w -i.--. Week - . - - HOTEL H0EB0R. of tha Lelead Ho a SyrBoae, H. T. Snaccsa. S. Y.. Oct It, What proved to be tbe most disastrous fire that has visited Syracuse for many years was discovered ia tbe Leland Hotel at 1230 o'clock this morning. Aaeyewitaesto the fire says It is positive thst st least twenty-five per sons have lest their lives and msny more have been more er lees injured. One woman was being towered from a window by tbe aid of a rope. She had reached a po'at opposite the third story when the rope became ignited from a burning sill, tbe rope parted, and tbe woman fell to the pavement her brains being dashed out and her body flattened into a shapeless mass. Frank Carrick. of Glenns Falls, N. Y.. has been identified as one of those that were burned to deatb. Many people crazed with fright lost their lives by jumping from "windows. One msn says ho saw six people jump from different windows on the Fayette street side of tbe building within a space of four minutes and the sight sickened him with its horror and ho was compelled to leave the spot The building was provided with both iron fire escapes on tbe outside and ropes on tbe inside, which were tho means of saving many lives. Among those injured is Cora Tanner, the actress, who was severely burned about tbo head and feet She was play ing an engagement at tho Grand Opera House, and bad a room in tbo hotel. Most of those killed were on tbo fourth and fifth stories. Frank Cssey, of Glenns Falls, N. Y., and Etnil Forbes, a prominent brewer of Syracuse, are among the dead. The building will be a total loss. It was built two years ago at a cost of $150,000 and the total loss mustbe&OO, 000. It was six stories high and con tained 400 room a The fire, which started in the kitchen, spread by means of tho elevator well, which was near tbe sta rway, and so all means of escape wero cut off and those in tho upper stories wero compelled to jump Within fifteen minutes after tho blaze was first discovered the entiro building was wrapped in flames. It was impos sible for tho guests to escape. The scene wa ono of the wildest confusion and people were to bo seen at tho win dows on every floor shrieking frantically for help, which could not be given tbem. Many wero seen to fall hack into tho flames fainting and exhausted, whilo others hurled themselves from the windows, meeting death on the pavo ment. Tho scenes and incidents connected with tho rcscuo of inmates wero heart rending in the extreme. A man and woman wero seen lockod in each other's arms in a window on tho fifth floor at tho northeast corner of the building. Ilelow tbem was a perfect sea of flame, with no possibility of escapo except by tho window and that seemed inevit able death. No assistance could reach them. The woman seemed to bo anxious to jump, but her husband was earnestly cntreat'ng her to desist The crowd below waited with bited breath. Tho woman made ono last ef fort to jump, was restrained by her hus band, and tho cry of tho crowd signaled tbe awful end that must havo befallen tbem as they fell backward into tho room into a mass of flames At a window on tbe fourth floor, al most directly under this, a woman ap peared under tho window. Sho was sur rounded on nil sides from tho interior of tho room by fierce flames. She seemed irresoluto as to whether to jump to tho pavement or to face the fiery foo that was fast encroaching on her life. Sho did not jump, but seemed to be withheld by either fearora feeling that escape would come from somo other source. She stopped down from the sill into the room, but remained at tho win dow but an instant when the whole room became enveloped in flames and tho woman sank back from view. The frightful shrieks of tho guests and the crackle of the flames could be heard for blocks away. The building burned so rapidly that most of tbe peo ple on tbe upper floors were obliged to uso tho fire escape or jump for their lives. Seven or eight men and children jumped from tho upper storios onto a shed in the rear of tho building. At one time seven persons were struggling together on the shed, which had already caught fire from the flying sparks. The victims were half naked. Several of them wero seen to tear off of their body under garments that had caught fire. One of the most frightful incidents of tho fire was the terrible death of a woman who jumped from tho fifth story of tbe building. Several policemen stood on tho sidewalk holding nets ready to catch the guests as they jumped. Two persons, a man and a woman, jumped into one of tbe nets almost at tho same moment and escaped with broken limbs. The next to jump was a woman who appeared in a window on the fifth story in her night clothes. She leaped out of the window, and missing the net was dashed to pieces on the stone sidewalk. She was picked up and removed to the morgue. AUteae Staek Yard. Kaxsas Cm, Ma, Oct 1C Tbe in tended extension of its business by tbe Farmers' Alliance of the Southwest was discovered when it was learned that they are about to establish an independ ent stock yards in Kansas City, Kan. Texas, Nebraska and Iowa aro back of the scheme. Fifty acres of land ad joining the present stock yards is the site of the new yards. By maintaining their own yards the farmers believe tbey can save much money in market ing their cattle, by doing away with the commission men and a great part of other expenses. Chicago, Oct 15. Police Officer Jnnge, of the Stanton avenue station, was shot and fatally wounded by an other oScer at three o'clock this morn ing. Junge engaged in an argument with OUcer Tim Madden about religion, and Madden accused Jnnge of belong ing to the organization known as the American Progressive Union, or the United Order of Deputies. One word brought on another until'Junge strack at f addea with his club, whea the lat ter drew his revolver aad shot Jaage ia the left aide ahoat two inches above tha heart Pcactxu T. X, Oct la. A yeaag Oscar Victor, wha pored by the Caaadaa Milling Com paay. was accidentally canght ha a cot ton gia ana his right arm aimast from his body. His lather Clinton, Me. s VW Vw VJ VIWi WWWW awani BaaaK k. mmm.mMm. s mr 5 haannnaannnaaaaaaaaaMahnnwahn-. aasaW-. a. aaaBasa i aaVSnaasBi anaaas anBaraavaBnaa1 aaja aBansssBaV aTaal rfMal B MJaeeaam amaBsaBnaaanal 6nBsan saBasaBna A- ahssas aatasaswarwl aaBBanVr aaaaah aafaaaawsaBBh aaaaaBBBBaalaBhnnBnV aana aLaaaraaTla Vaaasi SJB""l?SC?S,?lelt whna aysPawaajpaaal w- "'" " . " . . ,,, . , , , -, Jeraey eaw. T" V" ""- Tsimilln oraaaat aaita a mii"r. IiUIes alsec aha iaauasta af Bania'I aemsaaaa, aawhii Mi , aaaaaaaaawaaaaaiMi . ltwtct p. aaa aeea reeaiaaa aere aa oaetave tmmj fkmf .,.. tMimm wUeaaa Mania aaaaght he waa sheet i amar aanhnwa w, mm a mmmmiii . Wtm ai.PWaTwsfjjaaimi .-esav eaeii . Taar ""TJF- m aaaaaw iiius, ija, f,T vt w.aaj. tmw waaha aaaaaaaaa ia aavhag arsatinui im her I ZZZTt7mZJmZd7SJZJmZ.- lW i m ' ' li .- samawwa, a aww a wwwca, y., ataaa. aa lulll HI a 4ai.aM.aaaa asaaasateaaf twaaC assaaltm. Ma sata j Z3ZUX2ZXanF. LJii? ? A. M. H.-Ol . I3ML laaasaaasl Mwsi aa Oaaaw 3asa r il TZ "T ...- PTz. '- t". . -j assyyifat aijy.js.asin Li j i - - T.T- 'jTlfF ' '' . ' - sffJaMBMBsaBBsWaaaBB J WmWmWmmmWmmr -- 1 swBeaVBMMB) WmWWMmWmm. .1 JrWPaawaV aW avaVBMMa BTBMBhs-aMBmaMBMVBaaaBMnnTMn ansaaaaasaa aBawsaasar-saswawasaw my-m mwmr asasw- - ag TRADE REVIEW: aj TL WesMr anttw mmw Tiais Si a -4 ntonar -- th Haw Toast Oct It, R. a Dna k. Ce's weekly review of trade says: la aU directions baeineas improves aad the olame ef trade Is so increases that aataithsteadiag the recent enormous iaerease or circulation, the money mar kets are growing stringent Exports have become remarkably large, aad the domestic trade is such that exchanges onteide of New York exceed last year's by IS per ceat Bnt while New York aad Bostoa money markets are fairly supplied and steady at from 5 to e per cent, tbe market is tight at Chicago and stringent st Phila delphia, only part of the commercial paper offered being taken at from 6 to 7 per ceat St Louis notes an active market at 7 to 8 per cent, Milwaukee a close msrket at 7 and Savannah a tight market But at Cleveland aad Detroit tbe markets are rather easier, at Kansas City firm, at Deaver a good demand is well sustained, at Omaha the market is easy and at Pittsburgh there is a good demand without stringency. Trade is strong everywhere. At Bos ton wool is rising and goods in better demand, while cottons are selling well aad firm. At Philadelphia wool Is more active and slightly higher, the output of cotton is increasing, there is an in creased demand for paper with tendency towards advance in some grades, and the liquor trade is stimulated by new duties. Chicago reports smaller receipts of green and cured meats and dressed beef, cbeeso and butter than a year sgo, but a sl'ght increase in lard and double the receipts of wool and larger transactions in dry goods and merchan dise generally, with satisfactory pay ments St Louis merchants aro ad justing tbemsel res to new tariff condi tions and trade is strong. At Cleveland and Milwaukee bad weather has re tarded trade, which is nevertheless of fairvoluma At St Paul, Omaha, Denver and Kansas City trade is good. At Min neapolis the flour output declines to 106,000 barrels, but wheat receipts wore 1,800,000 bushels. At Pittsburgh the iron and glass trades are active, with a prospect of an advance in window glass, and at Savannah trade is brisk. The new tariff has caused an advanco in prices of some kinds of goods, which together with tho rise resulting from partial failure of crops has moved up tbe general level of prlcos materially, though less than one percent on all commodities since October 2. But tho higher range of prices accounts in pirt for the quick absorption of a circulation far greater than that of last year. PANIC IN SCHOOL. Deplorable Staaaprde Owing to aa Alaraa r Klrr. Chicacso, Oct IS. There was a panic with probable loss of life in St Stanis laus Reman Catholic Church, on Noblo street in the Polish settlement in tho northwestern portion of tho city this morning. Tbe priest Rev. Father Barzynsky, was conducting an eight o'clock service for children, and the church was filled with the little ones. While tbo scrvico was in progress tho altar draperies caught firo from ono of tbe candles and a panic enstiod. in tho wild rush about twenty of the children wore crushed and trampled on and some of them received Injuries which it is be lieved will prove fatal. There wero about 1..VJ0 children, ac companied by their mothers, in the church at tho time. Tho women and children becatno panic stricken and rushed pell-mell to tho exits. Thoso in front woro pressed upon by those bo hind and lost their footing on tho stono steps in front of tho building, whore they were tramp'.cd upon by tho fleoing multitude. The arrival of tho Arc department added to the stampede, and in a few minutes 10,000 pcoplo had gathered in tbo neighborhood. The firo was quickly extinguished, and tho polico with much difficulty rescued tho wounded children. None of them wero dead but a large number wero injured, a few seriously. Joseph Jasak, 12 years old. has a fractured skull and will probably dlo; Stanislaus Kaminska, injured internal ly; Frank Drewcicki, severe cut on the head; Stanislaus Furgot, 0 years old, injured internally; Martin Keoski, 10 years old; Frank Sick, 10 years; Loon Skowkowsky, 11 years. Iho sceno after the panic was over was terrible. Tho. stono steps at tho entrance were covered with blood. Tho carpets on tho floor of tho church and many of tbe pews were torn up, and the church had the appearance as if somo bloody riot had taken place there. STRANGELY FASCINATING. (Tnpteaaaat Effect wf a 11 et ore on Score ef Women. Losnox, Oct 18. A sensation has been roused in Berlin by the exhibi tion of a now pictorial representation of "Christ llefore Pilate." Tho paint ng Is by a Russian artist named Nicolai. Its powerful reslism may lie inferred from the fact that scores of worn on bsvo fainted at the sight of it The picture, though bumble, is strangely fascinat ing, and tho salon whero it is displayed is continually crowded to suffocation. The subject :s treated from an entirely different conception to that of Mun kacsy in his famous painting bearing the same title. The work is pronounced by critics to be vastly inferior to the latter from an artistic point of view, but yet it possesses a remarkable power which eaa hardly bo attributed to simple realism. ATcastaa HeWB"sy. New Okleax", Oct 18. Antonio Seaffldi, identified as one of tbe assas sins of Chief Heanessy. was shot aad mortally wonaded in the parish prison, by Thomas II. Duffy, a young man twenty-eight years of age. The shooting was done In the corri dor or "ball ring" of the prison, aad Duffy's actions were so quick thst sev eral deputies who were present knew aothlagof what was transpiring until the shot was ired. More thaa fifty arrests have beea made of parties believed to be impli cated ia the assassiaatioa of Heanessy. Wight. Nevada, Na. Oct 1& Jake Klmber aad Jcha Linn had been enemies for some time and whea they met engaged in a qsarreL Kimber. who was with a womsa, turned from Linn aad started heme whea Liaa raa after hiss aad subbed him ia tbe left side, below the ribs. The woaneed maa waa takea to a hotel aad medical aid sammoaea. The peyslciaas are retieeat, bat seem to re gard the woaaa aa probably fatal Kimber m the ana of a farmer lirin a few miles frees Kerala, aad yean Lisa ia lae sea ec u. w. use, a area beaker aad capitalist ef this city. lewa, Oct It. lev. Patrick Smith, pastor of tha Chnreh at Siana Laka Wasaarht aait Patrick Casey, earn ef the meat-1 efhis ehnrsa, far fHV the smnaat jary trial was had aad jwdgmeat teaad ahaat tha erissa. Be killaa Uwis to WalaJllCtVT'i ' ,7!'-'m aaaaaaaaaaPK "- mm.mmMmv a. JUSTICE MILLER. the AccomDttebed Jurist. Mmter .ff Alwaya m Strja Aa- WjuHuaauHt Oct 14. Jestke Millet died last aight at eight arautrs of elevea o'clock without a struggle and ap parently without pain. A few minutes before tbe famous jurist iTrnrl away the phlegm ia hU throat gradually accumulated and bis frame quivered. It was evident that the ead was fast approaching, aad the members of his household who were not in the sick room were hastily summoned to his bedsida Justice Miller was strlckca with pa ralysis about 2:36 o'clock Fr:day after- jj noon as he was returning hotaa from , tbe CepitoL He felt the first at tack in his left side when he wa about 100 yards from his house and utruggivd bard to reach home, but wu unablu to do so and fell prostrate In the itreet cutting his face badly. He rallied later j aad for a short time became conscious Saturday morning, however, tie again became unconscious and remained in a , state of coma until death came, Kvrr since Saturday his death wa expected at any moment and his pbjsic an bare marveled that he lived as long as ho did, , hearty and robust though his constitu tion was. lllOOKArillCAI. ' Tb lat Juticv auuul T ilitln w torn nt Ulchroon t. Ky. April 15. 1K He wj Kratluxtvti with bnnor at ihe trtmrrIiy t Transylvania atid at flrt -lc-it to alut ihw protection f in-illciiir. Alu-r pmctlc Ingaa physician a to j car-, ho vcr, ho dicitled to tudjr law, in which pr lm ht aooa roa to eminence III yinptlijr with the Northern al'te of the Urcr iju titm determine! hint to icaru K ntuikr. and In I 0 h went to Iowa nntl aooa txreamn one of the ItrpuhilcaU lcd-r In that thrn t oitlcr "tale. Not withstanding repeated and uuriit solicit. tioua. he Ueclncd to tt nouilnniu 1 fur auy i political offlce and eofiflnrd liltis'it to tuo prattle of his pn t s-lou. In 1.J !r -I Jent Lincoln appointed hlui an As.-atc- Jutlr ' of the Hupreue Court and tir many vrma ha has barn tne Njrtlor Jutc Junt.cn Field, appointed It l!5t by I.I in tiln, standing next li order of nlori y. Justice Miller, by common consent, has been rt-jfilded a thn atn jjft man on It Supreme Bncti ej aincc he limit hu a nt thereon, tin two occasions lir cvted for Chk-f Jmt Icr by t Ik- aipolntii.K -T. I'le-idcut Crant d coied I" n in njt him Cor that ofllce.butlt wasur ti d Hint It wr uld beau affront t Justice Noati II. Jwajnc, who had err-d l liRtr than Ju tec Miller, i and na m couipr mine M rr.son IL Wul'.o was hosen Durl i Mr. CW'Velan J' ui!m nNtr.f , tlon th tjuuH Inn f promoting Jutlr- Mil ler w 't-rlously considered b the l'rol- i dent when Chief Justice Watte died, but he Iwaadfasunttrd by hi parly uoc at- -. ho . deemed audi a course unwise, un I M i d e Y. Ku ler sua appointed Chief Ju-tlcw In I steal. Justice Miller was nlw.iys n strong t tit or- , Ity on constitutional lis, In vhich lino lie , e.irned a lepatutlon second o ly to that of Chief Jutlc? Miir.ihall. Aiiioiik tin b st ( know n opinions d-llveted were the a!aui:h- Intr hous cases f LouisI.ium. in which he deflmd Very clearly the line of dnuiitrc.i tl n between tne rltfht of the (,ov mine, it i and Ihoauof t.ic Mutes, ami li- tloj n'lchrut l llullet Kllbotirn cii-e. In w.ni'h n t h-M ilml Congress u a legis nte body. h. i no right to t ika Joitlcl I ptocet dlus ngnlM-l i mi) clt y.-n. but that micIi mtion mini hu I left to the courts as It tvlnir ticiu-lvt Juris- ! diction In sue. i rases, lie w th irirnl nd- ' Ts-rofth l'ri'sldeiit of tlm IN lte-1 rtutui , , on many Intricate juet on. and 1 1. i"i nllv true that no Aincric.tu JurNt tvi r st tod no hlh In 'I'" estimation ol tho leading men of but l polltlc.il parties. Personally Justlow Miller ti nlnrjy . nt of 111-) most popultir men In Washington. ! llu whh a t'.oroiuh t einorrat mid tri ated every man. h wver bumblu. . an -ii:il nnd with a dellich tu! coitr;cy In acit lllo ho was ill ways a J lly soul, brltntuiuir , over with lun nnd jjooil nut urn ami yit never deflciuiit In dlKoliy nti t If control, lit; ot.irrl d twice and a sou ant dutiht r by his tecunil wlie urn both married mi t ) h.ve families. A dauichler by h s flrst tHi . in riled the latu IHslrlct Alt i.-ni-y Corkhlll, or Washington. DEATH OF BELKNAP. (iencral Grant'a Illsaraeed Perretnrjr ol War found I toad tu His lint in. WasiiisoTO.v, Oct 13. General Wil liam Worth ltelknap. President (J rant's Sccrotary of War, who retired in d h grace, was found dea-i this morning in a room adjoining bis office at Xu. 1420 Now York avenue. It is thought that death was due to paralysis. It is believed ho died between mid night Saturday morning and oiht o'clock Sunday morning. General ltelknap was born in Jfe.--' burg, N. Y.. Sentombcr 22, 1H23. HU father was Colonel William G. Ilelknap, who fought with distinction in the war . of 1812, and later, in 1820, founded Fort ( Leavenworth. Tbo younger llelitnap ' studied law in Georgetown, D C, and , after being admitted to tho bar removed to Keokuk, Iowa, where he prac ticed his profession with morn or . less success. In lfvVT ho was ' elected a member of the Iowa Legislature as a Democrat When the , war broke out he joined tho volunteer army as Major of an Iowa regiment He was engsged at Sbiloh and Vicka burg. bnt first became prominent in Sherman's fsmous march to the ea. Ho was promoted to be llr cadier-General July 30, 1W4, and Major-Genera! March t ia, icoo. Alter tne war no serTca as col lector of internal revenue in Iowa, fro 18ftS until 1S69 During the latter year k ho was sppointed Secretary of War Yiv I MftaMflhat flennt '1'hic nfrr tin e tained during Grant's second adminia- ' tration, until March 7. 1S7G. when in , consequence of charges of official cor- ( raption. he resigned. Ho was Im- j peached and tried before tbe Senato for receiving bribes for the appointment of J post-traders, bat was acquitted on the technical ground of want or jurisdiction. McKlabrjr ia Mlrhlcaaw Katjumazoo. Mich., Oct, 14. Major McKialey opened tbe campaign for Con gressman Burrows in th scity laat night He spoke also with Mr. Harrows in tbe afternoon at Dowariac and deso te rain at both places had large audiences. He was pale aad careworn and hl's volee I was almost gone. At first be eoald scaraely he heard but finally warmed op to his ssbjeet aad whea he got oa the borne market theme be was elo queat He said he disliked this cry for cbe-ip prices for cheap aad nasty went to gether aad he believed that whea things were cheapest mea were poorest because cheap prices meant no work. Tha Kasiaswra. Ptttbbc-bgv, Pa., Oct: 14 The twee ty-seveath anneal international cob vea tiea ef the Nattoaal Brotherhood of Lo comotive Engineers is beiax btllrd te meet here aext Wednesday. Tee ad vance committee has arrived and made all areaaratkras for accommodations. eta This will be one ef tho most lm aartaat eoaveatloas ever held, as aevef al vital qeestioas will bo decided, not the least being nroablc- oa Wtsera roads where mea are alacesi ia charge mt aaa wha have net served a proper aaareauceaaia. at tee seswoa a- wul he repreeeaten. r JacasaaT.Maai.Oct li Andre wHar ria fsalawdL wha nasnawassei Mayer aM.lAwiaatCIiatoaFnaay aight. lei la isll han ws that ha aleae is ' gatlty aad ala a- me says teas aa aeae e i r WT9Wm2ZJZ2ttSm I aatsatM.sawaMissaaaasaaasBw IhatWeiewa. saa.ataeraa- ipMPaya! laaeeaak haawiag lWrJlialBsBaBBwaaisSa i i llvfy Why does this man stare so ? lie is simply listening to the marvelous cores effected by Dr. Pierce Gold to Medical Discovery. The following case illustrates: rrfecuary 1UK i" Wonxo's Drsrawaanv MaotCAt. Amocxa Toa. Buffalo. N.T.: 0iK.Vw-A iiisraeMf mm ass ocrwrrsal la our trmtoey. J. !. lawtT. 11 inist payafcaaa after rSyatrsma. rst medktersv bom: rcrtpSS-la fact, rrtarjtalaa. II wrot to a noKd saa:ariuia aat mums! CO brUasr. We sit thouW S wss stytsw wH cwasaaaiion. and only a few vacs of HU wcr left for aim. He romaM-adst -OtMm JSistiosl Disf. rr. ard at tha aaaw Uaw eoaawM to mend. He has uanl Nut two doasn tottJra. ami ! still mar . ll & hvd In wrifM. rotor axxS atrroxih, and I ante to dt isM work. It ! juat aura a oaax- as w aSottM hare ItaSencd to other auspjooualr. but when wn are H ww tnttat tcllrre U. It ha trebles our mica of -OoJdea Medical Dtscoiror. jqjw ACKrrr M ajj, DrarshSS, Rmaok. lad. Ia all bronchial, throat airilting affections, lingering coughs, sjHttiag oi DloOiJ, weaK mngs ana ainarea ailments, the " Dtcovcrv cffecU the rooftt marvelous curra. ax- aM .La " satis airs W . i w.ow avawgaoyrapaamsa tmw MOTHERS' FRIEND ustcmld mmm p usso one consinimsnt. IkMiK TO "MoT It M Mailio "HII sKrit:iJaK4 ' lvtmko. at ht.. us. bou Lt a ix linrtii.ti. J eeaMKs rjairskKawss mr an. BaaaaBnam Annwmr rawenfsa "WORTH A GUINEA A BOX For BILIOUS ft NERVOUS DISORDERS Such as Wind and Fain in fAe JTsetaat. Fullnt mnj Smlhnj mftmr aVt. Oi'f lines:, and Oromurfit, CMCkMa,rfuhmgt of Ht. ist t mt iff it. Shortness of Bnath. Co$tirrnt. Scvnrjr. lotchi thm J. fW SI p. Fright fut Drvemt. mnd mil Mwtous and TrmUif $mtmtims 4c. THE FIRST DOSK Witt. CIVK an.Hr IN 1 WHatY JtMawTtaV &IICH'3 ftUS UWI AS OtfilCttO KlStOKl flMM MeOaVasW MMM, For Sick Headache. Weak SttMdr. ha Digestion. Constipation. they ACT lilt MAWC. f?ff ltn hl.ilm lirlnrltitf lrrk I tin hmm Jim mt HCAUH hnm-kol phytltal tho to lh ffrsews aJ Vbi:iMi t ltil ECHAWt rill I iky Mnaaimav airmrtkr in in tarnm n rr-are4 ssW ky Tlltm. SHU I'M A M. i. M-t'tM. 14 J.4tf frw.rb'rer". . f. AllEN CO.. 3ft a4 J MmI Avlfir lh t'til.t Mt- rJU lit ll.i:i IIAXH ril.I.'i ' Ill.t I.IIT ! I'liM bold av f nM r aoLo av HtuesisTs tvuwwausc nreahMtbuidensarfrS aBnsnsWms- daaaW JnsnTnnBBBa. mIX'JmmMmUmWmm What would you who irould take half your hrd work off tmr ahmtWer ami do it without a murmur Y What wouUl awt mrirr tm find an aitant in yonr hontcwork that wtiimt krp ponr fioorn and walln ctan9and yoirkitrhmt bright, an yri never grow ugly orer the matter of hard work f jdk in junt much a friend mnd can be bought mt ff grmerm. l nnnnnnnVnnMXa?xfQPttWVVY KL aRaWT m arwTbwriNn mm mw mmimnim m it. ?jm .afl T HI E ITIvTcURElhr asasafJaganswiaXTItKOTlitam W4S-sMtsc,ywT(k. lr--jtsAaaal I'M Tirtfs Pills Tonic, Alterativ mnd Cathartic Propertt Speedily Raatore uaamjmaet SS-1SMJ aassisaiMa UaWfrRaWV, TIFFia. - OHIO. I yj!ar tmMm9mmt: Taeasm. EMCTRICELT afBBsrV r f f'iiaBaasaiWaaBmiaaBaaT WBmmmmWmlmWz&Zrw-!mmlmmZI m&SfmWwtmmmWWSr' ff"""j g2i NR? aBBaaCBam. Vawaanffl f JlB.3aiW saaawawasjawasBB. asssw sr Hv omaas si s - bjm mmmwmrfwmy w i . t - "-w - -- . w mmmwm'ii wwtm jm, a if., w waaxcxrE. m T'vTr4jitmmr.ri eBBBBm SBaBsaBBTwarBBW 9mW w saswawasas mmW saw , . m.., . - a BORE M& fiSin pi! w-aaas Mat.lwaMssaaw.B?ll. BBB t K f mam Mil aa Sat aim al Bj-aMOflaaaaaaaa Pt wa, a "jau laiaitsaw Appapppppa aaaaBavaaT tf ak ajaha 3sw am"aaaaapas.as aasa naaae ma-aBJBmBBBjBBBa-- eaaVaauanai 4aaal aWflBnataBBBsVaBBVahnYaahaht - . aaaaaaa aaAantfnnnannvaaaavrfBM.aBaBw 9 .MaBBBBBtBBBBSBBiHBmmammmmsmmmsswawawawawawasBwa waaaw wasm wasBwawaaawi wajas awawawasBB. i. saawsawr awawi arwvi ss -. -. . - A IIITIfl aV3rsreV Man IMB HMnmaw aahasl jwW sasnwswwhsw imBBBBaaBBBma iSari!!fa eaveW .BkBnBnBnBnBnBnBnBnsKanBBBnJt-- .. BaBaBaBasasaTsl m.w T .PVF-'M lBBsasasasasasal BatanW rMaTaasasasasasasasasasaaWsmsg.. , y-aasasasasasasaTaasalnMawsna saBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBaBasaW W. L. DOUGLAS $3 SHOE FOB CtMTiatJfll. taT9st s44 t" St t fciVi. t8,Mx. V. t, tMt tlljs, ttr-rit-u Mas. ' tMMMqWrM IMPMTMT NEW WSCOVERT. "VASELINE" IHEIESTCfliniKtMStii TnlSnpdUm .. ut KMOLuxsrr jt rtjcAt-iwu - VASaUITR. ir nur 4vo.s4 mm -4 aw3 I. fiwiajstlCCCITSwSTAJstt, w SJnrTaTaTTTfAiuTISfAaa rati. CHESBIWCH lAIUFKIliFtlK &, 24 ttst trset. HIW VsH. THIS It TMI CLASP 1 naio. wttawwwwr found. That holds tho Holl on which Is wound Tho Braid that la known tho world around. fiwefeaaa 0E ass ft rwtt Jf.ttim( 'SO Disoritfom Uwr, .. WMseuiax i anarltt. SB tillfttati tramsi. 4Hmi41mp fi vy k m.f frjfr,4.1 to ftSH : !. A H ISHtl V-SSK. 'srs srs tvtavwMtac ns'swli mT . F sfsra p this Oasolid ceJe ofacourinfisoeap uacd-orcIesnin purposes-;- give for a Friend HOME EMBROIDERY MaCMSRE Eftrf IMj Vaalt N. EftfT Uw Caa H. PIWEa tlM. EvwryUSsawaUlatfltl a-jj tHtte mltm f f fsn A09 Z UArtWrwtTIs Ui. aV r 5 t SrS 'SOWHL Sr-fc wtit"Um i asrf n mrr 1 T ?.-- ma '. srs sa.iwvss: mc" sa ft ffsfmJ fimm f i A4tf-sa. ' M. V . ax y tiMf, swat aa t mmm. W A aaaasT BBBBaBBBnBBBBBBBBBnBBnBBBBBBBa B L -JsJasassVam i awasssjasiaJ BaBBBBBaHVaaBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBa! aw aaaa east arw i s - ..! . Hill 111 I .'I, PSjsjaaw'sssTsaS tiawasiaswhBaa ""fj -ss. S U TU(M, ax Wyaas PaaJnawaaV rWiw Javmanaaaw vwf s", m.. .am BBsaBBB ansBsv aMjJI ABs af awK BBBBm - -: sjasj laawaj - aa. -- M& ,r- 3."Hl siSHJia?"''" &&' . 2. - s. ? r - r 3 - ' , r-z : a . - - . - .. swaaaaasaasaaaaansasawaaBaaai -... .: ssaaaaaaamsmaaas - &t ' - h? . i -" .---? - . - i' - - -" . . -. e & cs: i