r i FAMILY : JOURNAL A Weekly Newspaper issned eyerj Wednesday. 32 f olninns of reading matter, con sisting of Nebraska State News Items, Selected Stories and Miscellany. (j-Sample copies sent free to any addnM." Subscription prica, CI a year, in Advance. Address: M. K. Totiseb Co, Colambnu, Platte Co., Nebi A- DTJSSELL, OKAI.SB IS O G UMTS REPAIRED ON SHORT NOTICE. :vo St., nearly opposite Poit-offlce. Cjaur.fi9-y LOUIS SCHEEIBER. Msiil JilUUMi il kinds of Repairing done Sim rt Notice. Baggies, Wag oiis. etc., mado to order, and all work Guar anteed. 01 ho sll the world-famous Walter A. Wood Mowers, Reapers, Combin ed Machines, Harvester!, aud Self-binders tho best made. -.""""Shop opposite the "Tattersall,"' on OJivo St.. COLUMBUS, 'jfi-m jyiiieiBiis Advertising (.'route? many a new business, Enlarges many an old business, llevive? many a dull business, IJe.-cwes many a lost business, Saves many a Tailing business, Preserves many a large business, Seen es success in anv business. Ho Raj's a man ot lnsine-9, and we add that judicious adtertibins, for this section of country, includes THE JOURNAL A on? cf thf medium. bpcau'v it is r?ad by the l2t m?o; Uuo who know what they want ani" liny fm w hat ihey K-t. Wo chullvnce comparison with anj cvnntri paper iu tho world in this rc f-j-eot twenty jenrs juil.lit-hiiiK hy tho same maiiapeinent, nr.d neer one'dnn to RnlMrilers pittilisiiHi in TilK .Iuciinau This, better than imilliiu rlrf, shires th elas of people hu icid The Jouunal. even- week. tf GOSHEN FENCE MACHINE! CHEAP. ONLY $15. Woven wire and slats, cnt willow. split boards kc thine of the 6ort, oed: after posts are set, fence can Iks made nnd Btretched on the ground, in the winter, by n boy or ordinary fss hand, 10 to 40 rixls a day, and can work it oyer say ground. Tto man who ha one of these ma chines can bnild r fence that is more durable and safe than any otitor, and r -ike it tt le cot. Tho machine and c sample of ita v.-ork can bo scon in the city on 11th ftrt tt Ernst & Schwarz hardware store. WillsMl iv-hines. or territory, or contract to pat up fence. lmajtf J. a. MATHEWSOX. "NWWSPV?T? vtcofeoflOOpag . iigCtl&l .tiie best bcc&ioru lif--, ----advertiser to coa JflnuFHTisiMCu:t' n perV ljJltfrSia IUIq.i or other wlaff. Jtcon:ainslht3oinewdpapci8 and estimates of tfce coatarndYertlslnff.Tbe advertiser ao wuils to spend one Collar. And ia ltthe In t bruiAtiou he requires, while forhliu who will tnreetoue hundred thousand dollar in ad vertiainc. a scheme is indicated which will eethU every requirement, or can bemad to do to by tHeht ckanfU eerily arrived sX by eov retmendenee, 149 cdittooa have been Issued. Sent, post-paid, to any address fcr 10 cents. SrAte te EO. V. BOSVELL ft CO, HEWSPAPEK AnVKRTISKG BUKEAU. ::0Sorac5t.FrlnUagHoeMSq.). Kewlafc PATENTS Caveais aad Trade Marks obtained, and all Pat ent bosioeas etadaciaA for MODEitAT FEES. OUB OFFICE IS OPPOSITE U. 8. PATENT OFFICE. We hare no b-aencies. all business direct, hence we can transact pctcst business ia fesa time and at LESS COST tiaa iiui remote fiws Washington. . . Bead model, drawing, or photo, with descrip tion. We advise if patentable or not, free or charge. Oar fee not due till patent is secured. A book, "How to Obtain Patent-." with refer ences to actual clieets iu yo - sa:e, county ox town, sent free. AddrKs C. A. ,V O I & 0, Opposite FaUBtO&r-. - i.:oa.D. C. $5 ;$jqy V Agents Wanted I CiaaxsasFsn. l.0 Siewjttrt SAttty Bel Holders given away u .mnxiucr utm. l-rery or owaer ey frn I to time carer ar.r taTmt' !ti. t cad X3 ct: la iUbm io ssr imUlt aud Barkis tor Ylcfcsl Fit I SaiMUullaSrtl ffr3EBaa r -'-miMvmrn tzSMfifimm lMilWiiHker i rrtzz H - ill ii I ir-4ft m wimwU. C 8' all Ik I 11 Uil Ii v si Jl, !.. Nilf.aVsfW TOPICS OF THE TIMES. A CHOICE SELECTION OF IN TERESTING ITEMS. lomment-. mad Criticlnma flnel Upon the Huppeuiuc or the Day-Historic! awl Mews Mots. riuNcr. Bismarck keeps the wolf from the door with $170,000 a year. Almost 54,000 Frenchmen belong to the L;gion of Honor. 02,021 of tlicm ; being connected with the army aud the j lest civilians. TnK snow-shovel factories of New En gland will start the season with COO.000 snow-shovels left over from last year, and the Middle Stales and the West stand ready to furnish a tramp for every shovel. Let old Boreas get up and howl. Was this the introduction of Free masonry into this country? Weeden, in his history of New England, says that in 1658 fifteen families came to Newport, R. I., from Holland, bringing, with their goods and mercantile skill, the first three degrees of Freemasonry. Physicians say that cases of nervous prostration are less frequent since low heels have come into fashion. They allow the whole weight of the body to rest on the feet, remove the tension to which the muscles are subjected by high heels, and keep the calf of the leg in its normal condition. Somkthisc! new iu the way of brick making has sprung up at St. Joseph, Mich., where the sand of the beach by a chemical process is being turned into bricks. They arc represented to be superior to pressed brick, and large quantities are being put into tine resi- dences and the fronts ot bnsiness blocks. Royalty is always dear in England. 'An ebony walking stick which once be longed to Georgius Tertius was lately sold at auction iu Loudon for $90. The gold top was eugraved with "G. R." aud crown, and contained the hair of Princesses Augusta Elizabeth, Mary Sophia and Amelia, and was inscribed as the gift of Princess Mary. The Sioux Indians who are looking for an Indian Mestiah are under the leadership of an old medicine man named Red Shirt, who is believed to bo over one hundred years old. IIo gets his name from the fact that he has always worn a red ilanuel shirt, and his extremo old age is inferred perhaps from the evident antiquity of that gar ment. Theke are 500 convicts in the South ern Indiana prison, and fifty of them are serving life sentences. Some of these are for murders committed, tho most brutal known iu the history of Indiana, and among them wife slayers predominate. Mauy are men serving sentences for the most insignificaut of fenses. One man is serving a year for stealing a pair of 10-cent socks. In some cities classes have been or ganized to teach the young men and women to read the New Testament in the Greek language. A united effort in irt tliRin to read it in Enclish, and do it understandingly, would be more to the point. There is a growing move ment toward the .-esthetic in religious circles. A effort, as it were, to build up exclusive circles inside the one that should be broad enough to take in "all sorts and conditions of men." A writer on disinfectants claims that the most reliable one that is practicable for families is tho vapor of sulphur. To use this put it iuto an iron vessel, set it on fire and leave it to burn out in the apartment with the doors tightly closed. About two pounds of roll sulphur is re quired for a looni ian feet square with ceiling of ordinary height. The fumes are dangerous to life, aud caution must De observed in entering the room be fore it is free from the sulphurous gas. An English newspaper charged a shire councilor with having "tiddly winked the shire funds." The law was invoked and, after consulting all avail able dictionaries without finding any definition of the term, the (Jourt de cided that the phrase was not neces sarily libelon". The game of tiddle wiuks, which is now in Yogne in this country, is one of skill, and an expert tiddlewiuker must be gifted with slight of hand. Financial tiddluwiuking is a suggestive phrase, and is now intro duced for the first time. Awfvi. occurrences cry out from the telegraph paqes of the press with start ing regularity. There teems to be no interruption in the procession of what was once regarded as horrifyiug event, but which now, owing to famil iarity, aie looked upon as matters of course. It requires a stupendous eftort of the mind to Tealize that these violent deaths, murders and accidents which hurl human beings into eternity by trainloads are a necessary adjunct of our civilization and a part of the pro gress of the age, bnt so .they have come to be considered, and no regular reader of the daily pres is nowadays moved to unubtial remark by a perusal of thee hitherto harrowing recitals. Ix the luorriago ceremonies in the Salvation Army tho brjde ia not asked to reply to the question common inmost Christian organizations whether she will obey her husband. Xo exception was made ia this respect in the mar riage of Gen. Booth's son Herbert to Capt. Carrie fcjehock, a Salvation lass. Marshal Baliicgton Booth was asked the reason why the word obey is omitted from the service. The Marshal replied through one of lm Captains: "We do not admit the inferiority of women to men in tho Salvation Army. That principle permeates the organization from the General down to the meane-it private. In fast, most of the married warriors confess that their wivj3 are the better half. fco Gen. Booth has made a marriage service aud put it in the 'Orders and Regulations for Field Ofii cers,'h big book, as follows: "Will joif have this man to be your wedded husband, to live together after God's ordinance in the holy state of matri I mouy; will you love him, terve, henor, j and help him in sickness and in health, i and never seek to prevent his doing j anything that is in his power to do, or giving anything that is within his power, to help the 'Salvation Army,' and so on. The Cincinnati Enquirer very prop perly calls a halt on ilcut alarms" in the case of fire. Ass result of o silent alarm in Cincinnati, there was a col lision between a ladder wagon and a street car, a number of people in tho car having a narrow escape. Silent alarms endanger the lives of those who may happen to be or the street and whose only warning of the approach of the engines and wagons at bieakneck speed is the clang of the bell, and fre- juently this notice is so brief as to be dangerous to the pedestraiu. lint wnen ie big bells ring ont the streets are e'eared m advance and there is no dan ger of a collision or of any body being hurt. There is no good reason for a silent alarm. The location of a tire is something with which every bodv ought to be made acquainted promptly. Men stop iu the midst of their business to count the strokes of the bell, and if it is their property thati3 lieing cousumed it is their desire aud their right to hasten at once to the scene of the fire. In the case of a silent alarm they have no means of knowing of the destruc tion of their homes and valuables until the mischief has been accomplished. The practice dees not pevail in Co lumbus to a very great extent, but there ought not to be a single instance of it. Obeyed "lie Speret." An old negro was found casting a net in a preserved fish pond. "I have vou at last," exclaimed tho owner. -Stand right where you are. If yon try to run I'll shoot you. "What are yon stealing my fi-h far?" "Look yere, you doau call dis stealin' fee-h, docs you?" -Of course I do, yon trilling scoun drel!" Wall, ef date de case dar's er p'int o diffunce betwixt us. I call it 'ligion, sah.' "You call it what?" -'Liirion. sah: dat's what I calls it. Peter aud John an' all de 'ciples, whia da folt 'ligious tuck er net an' went an kotch some feesh, an' now, wheu de sperit dun moved me, an I has come 'cordin' ter de scriptur' an gunter cast de not, w'y yore you como an' calls me er thief. Ez "Jiglons er man ez you ez ouchter be 'shamed o' yo'so'f. W'y, I reekou ef you hader libed in deole days an hader seed Peter er feeshin', you woulder got after him, too. Dar was jes bich men or Jibitf at dat time, sah, an'whutdid da do? Da strayed off at ter de golden ca'f o' 'niqnity an' let de feesh o righteousness er lone. De speret moved me ter come on" down yere an' cast dis yere net an' now you come an' 'ject tor de speret." "I object to yon stealiug my fish, yon trilling rascal." "I ain't stealin' yo' feesh, sah. I jest castin' de net like'de sperit tole me to do." -So you haven't taken any fish?" -No, sah, cose I ain't; but I kain't hep it if de speret tole me ter cast de net." -What have vou got in that bag?'' -Dis bag right yere?" "Yea, that bag right there." "What's I got in it?" "That's what I said." -Wall, f-ah, I put er few fec3h In 3'ere jest ter keep 'em frum bein' proud iu de Mesh. Ycoik is moustut: proud some time, sali. an' I jes wautar show 'era dar's sicher thing ez pride comin' down puttv low." -Yes, and I'll just show you there's such a thing as going to jail." 'What! 'Caze I follered de speret an' tuck de pride outen de leeh? Wall, I f-eei one thing mighty cl'ar. -Dar ain't no usen er man follenn de speret deze days. Ef Peter was yere now he'd git 'gusted wid de white folks an' go off down yaiidar wid de niggers. Now, sah, ef vou wauter disgrace yo'se'f by takiu' me ter jail 1'so wid you." Mem phis Avalanche. An Ipdiat; VItop's Hard Lot. According to the account quoted by Dr. Farrow in his valuable work on the "Mortuary Customs of the North Ameri can Indian," the Tokotins, cf Oregon, compelled widows to pass through au ordeal to which the suttee would al most be preferable. The body of the deceased husbaud was kept for nine days laid out iu his lodge. During theso nine days the widow is obliged to lie beside it from sunset to sunrise, no matter what the season or the tempera ture. Gn t!;p tenth day the body is burned, together with ishstover properly once appertained to it in the way of clothing and arms. The widw must also lio btsido the corpse on the funeral pile. On no account may she mova until tho doctors so order. This merciful command is never given, however, until the living body of the poor woman is completely covered with blisters. If at any time during tho life of her husband she Las been known to commit any act of infidelity, or to neglect to minister to his comfort iu anv wav. she ii now severely punished. The relative of the dead warrior will again ami again tliug her back upon the burning pile, from which her own friends must rs many time3 drag her forth, more dead than alive. Whan all is over the widow nvnit collect tho larger bones, roll them up in an en velope of birch bark and carry them constantly on her back for years. She is now aslave to the whole village, and her least refusal to obey an order is cruellv Dunished. The ashes of her late husband are collected and buried in a grave, and sjifuiid any weeds appear upon thin grave she is obliged to root them out v.ith her bare lr.gers, while her husband's relatfvs. stand over and beat her. ' 9to Htne of Uiimor. There are various ways of ooming to grief, when one attempts telling another per-ou's stories -Annie, tell that anecdote Cousin Olive told, the other night, please," said a young lady to her siiter, while they were making a cal!. When Aunie had complied, her sister announced, sympathetically, to the company. "You can imagine how funny it was, because Olive tells a stiry so we!!!' Another unfortunate relater of a bor rowed talp v.asa gentleman who ven tured to ask an jntimate friend, "Why don't vou wear a wig ? "I'd rather dye." was the answer, and though the pun was an old one it hap pened to be now to the hearer, and gieatiy amused him not so much that he .did not sj eedily forget the point. That njght, on returning home, he said to his wife, "Richardson said an awfnllv good thing this afternoon. I asked him why he didn't wear a wig, and he paid lieu rather commit suicide than do fctich a thing. Why don't you laugh? liut then, women haven't any sense of humor, to sj eak of!" I'roiupt Meals. Go business-like enough to run your house en schedule time aud be prompt with the meals. A hungry man is gen erally an ugly man, and then is the timeto be philosophical. To kiss him at this time is to make him crawl, He wants consomme, not caressing. Be ready to receive him when he come in to dinner. Be in the doorway and let him see the fire-light or the lamp from tho hail Let him take his overcoat off and his hat and his rubbers, and let him blow his nose if he wants to. Let him solicit a welcome, but don't proffer it if he thows a disposition to get to the fire first. It is execrable taste, but it is the kind he will manifest if his trousers' legs are damp, his feet wet, sod his hand cold. .Yet? York World, $400v000 WORTH OF FRUIT. The Fruit Comes Here, the Money Goes tw Californlu A Great limy' S!. " Less than sis years ago the multifari ous delicacies of the glorious climate of California were almost unknown in New York market. To-day they adorn nearly every big and little fruit stand in towu. They excel the finest native products in beauty and size, vie with them in flavor, aud are not so dear that a workingman cannot afford to buy some for his wife or sweetheart. Only a few years ago Tokays from the Golden Gate brought 50 cents a pound ; now they may be had for 10 aud 15 cents. This is because Ca ifornia has awak ened to the fact that New York is the great fruit center of the world, and pays the highest prices for the best products. At the end of this season she will have poured frm her marvellous cornucopia into this and neighboring State 10,000,000 pounds of grapes, pears, peaches, prunes, and plums. Tliat will be just half of what she will unload at Chicago this voir, aud ten times as much as she sent to us only three years ago. She has got the giip on the affections of the fruit lovers hereabouts by offering them only her best products, and she is going to try to keep it. Our native fruit is not hold ing its own against the Western invader. This is especially tme of pears, which are much inferior to the luscious clear skinned Ca. ifornia Bartletts that may be seen on hundreds of stands in tempt ing, picturesque pyramids of gold aud rose. The peaches from across the con tinent don't come up to the bet from near-by orchards; but they are big and juicy and fair to look upon. Nearly all the California fruit that comes here is sold by Auctioneer E. L. Good sell at his store in Park Place or on the long, roofed pier at the foot of the street. Buyers from Philadelphia to Providence are informed by tele graph of the expected arrival of a train load and come here to bid on whatever imrt of it they may want. Mr. Good- sell is a tall, nervous young man with the rapidity of utterance characteristic of a good auctioneer. He is an Eastern man and a graduate of Yale, but he is as much of a hustler as the wild West overproduced. He defies anybody even in Chicago to beat his recoid of selling in four and a half hours on Sep tember 2, fifteen carloads or fruit, com prising 3,500 boxes of Bartlett pears, 4,000 botes of peaches, 1,000 boxes of plums and prunes, and 2,500 crates of grapes. Forty men unloaded the cars and piled the fruit in 400 different lots on the pier. Fifty trucks took the fruit away, beginning to load at 11 :30 a. m. and" getting through the job a little after midnight. Twenty-four hours after the sale occurred every California shipper had the money he obtained from it in his pocket or his bank. Many of the purchasers who gather on the pier when a trainload is piled there, like miniature mountain chains, are Italian jobbers who sell to the ven ders aud stand keepers. Boxes in every lot are opened, and buyers are allowed to examine the fruit, Every buyer has a catalogue, which tells where tho fruit is grown. The Earl Fruit Company is the biggest shipper. There are h.alf a dozen Chinamen in the busi-iess, and they disioae of their fruit to the big conceius which send them here. One of the lots sold the other day was made up of two boxes of pears grown by Mr. Quong Wo, who has a reputation as a fine grower. One hundred of his coun trymen make a living as growers. In exchange for her tons of fruit tho job bers of this section will send California about $400,000, all of which will be nearly clear profit. Mr. Goodsell says that California fruit has come to stay. Ho believes that we shall be receiving within a few years more than goes into the Chicaco market The cars that bring the fruit here are run into the section where the growers are and loaded di rectly from the orchards and vineyard-. The fruit is packed in such condition that it may ripen at the eud of ten days, tb(3 length of the journey from the. Western coast. New York gets the very best quality of thp crop, because she pays more for it than the growers can get elsewhere. New York Sun, Not Forgotten. A man with a business-like air en tered a Chicago book store, and has tily summoning the proprietor, thus ad dressed him : "How many volumes of Longfellow's poems do you want?" "How many do I want!" exc' aimed the proprietor" glancing up at a du,ty shelf, "by George. " sir, I don't tvaut any. I have had a lot of his stuff on hand for about ten years, and if you try to shove off any of his jabber on me you'll have me to whip. He is forgot? ten," "How many copies of his 'Building of the Ship' have you?" "I don't know and I don't care; .but what difference does it make when I couldn't sell a dozen for a tuneless song? I tell you that our people don't like Longfellow and won't have any thing to do with him." "They may not care anything for him now. but they will care for fiii'n in r day or two; and my prediction is that within a week you will have orders for at least a thousand copies." "Nonsense," the dealer replied. "No, it's not nonsense. The Brook lyn School Commissioners have declared that the poet, hitherto supposed to be so gentle and pure, is now dangerously erotic." "What do you mean by erotic?" "pli, vulgarly passionate, for in? stance." The dealer sprang over the counter, seized the man and exclaimed: "You have saved me from bankruptcy. Send me 2,000 copies, quick. Arkansaw Traveler, flow Good Habits Heroine llad Ones. Good habits, long persisted in, may and do become bad habits, says Dr. W. S. Searle in the North American lie view. To some this proposition may appear paradoxical. But it will become ctear when we reflect that any routine in habits tends to the over ue of cer tain organs, and to a corresponding lack of the use of others; so that, on the one hand, the former becomes liable to dis eases of over-excitability, while the lat tpl are rendered hablp to those of tor pidity. Thus even good habits may become productive of disea-e. Indeed, it is so common as to be within the ob servation of every one that a change from snch routine is conducive to health iu fact, often entirely renovates the individual. Hence the benefits of vacations which afford an eutire revolu tion in the scenes an 4 pmploymonts of !rofessional aud businuss men, Broad y considered, change which brings about an alteration of vital action is the sole curative principle in disease, whether accomplished by fresh scenes, unaccustomed diet, alteied habits, or drugs. As a conservator of health, too, it is pre-eminent. Grsntlma'a Ideas ofs 91,000 Salary. E. "W. Winter, general manager of the Omaha Railway, enjoys a gooa story as much as any man I know, particu larly if it be'on himself, He tolls the following tale with great gusto: "My grandmother is a dear, innocent lady, who lives up in -Vermont She was telling' a vintorairkbottt the family, one day, and when my turn -'came she said, 'Now; thereVErne, lie's doingright well,' and her voice tank impressively. 'They do say he's getting as much as a thousand dollars a year, though I don't see how he can earn all that money honestly." Aeic York Star, WOMAN'S INTUITION. Xearlr Always Right In Her Jutljrment in Regard to Common Thins. Aji oM gentleman orer seventy caniv into tho city from h's arm without liNovcreoat. The day tiirncti chilly, and lie wa obliged to forvfro his visit to the fair. To a friend who remonstrated with iiini for soini; away from home thus unprepared he said: -I thought it was jiuinjj to lie warm: my wife told me to take my overcoat, but I wouldn't. Women have more en-e than men. anyway. A frank admNsiou. Women's pood tense is aid to couie from intuition; may ir not he that they are more cloe observers of little things. One tiling U certain, theynruapt to strike the nail oti the head, in all the ordinary probkrus ot life, mote fieiiucntly than the lord-, of cre ation. 'According to Dr. Alice ilenuett. who re cently read a paper on ltrlt-ht's disease be fore the Pennsylvania lit ate. Medical Society poisons subject to bid u-. attacks and sick headaches, who have crawling sensations, like the Hjwiu of water in the head, who are -tired all tin time" and havuune.xp.aiued attacks of sudden weakness, may well Ire t-Uipected of dangerous tendencies iu the diiection of Urlaht disease." The veteran newspaper rorrespondent, Joe Howard, of tho New York Preta, lu noting tl statement, suiipes. ' --Possibly Alice is cirrect iu her diagnosis, but why doesn't she give some idea of treatment? 1 know u m in who, has been 'tired all the. time for ten years. Night before last he tcok two doses of calcined and yesterday he wished ho hadn't." A proper answer is found in the following letter of Mrs. Davis, wife cf Kov. Wm. J. Davis, of Basil. Ohio. June -'1, 1690: "I do not hesitate to .say that I owe my life to Warner's Sale Cure. I had a con stant hemorrhage from my kidneys for mora th.m live months. The physicians could do nothing for me. My husband spnt hun dreds cf tVdlars aud I was not relieved. 1 was under tiie care ot the most eminent medical men in the State. The hemorrhage ceased before I had taken one lwttle of tho Safe Cure. I can safely and do cheu. fully recommend It to ail who a ro sufferers of kid ney t roubles." "BLACK YOUR FACE HERE." What May Result Irani the Crowing DU lik r .Miiiburn. The fair sex often seek eagerly for a preventive against sunburn, says the Now York Monthly Journal. Some re searches made by Dr. llobcrt Bowles have resulted in the discovery of an in fallible one, but one which a woman with even tho most bcautiftil complex ion will find too exacting in its condition. It is an acknowledged fact that sun on snow burns more quickly than on rocks or in heated valleys at a low elevation, and Dr. Howies remarks that sunlight reflected from freshly fallen snow acts much more tuiergetlcally on the skin than that reflected from older snow. One brilliant day ho painted his face brown and ascended the Gorncr Grat, where there was much snow. There were about eighty others making the ascent. In the evening all excepting Mr. Bowles were smarting from the effects of sunburn. He points out that in Mo rocco and all along the north of Africa tho inhabitants blacken themselves around the eyes to avert ophthalmia from the glare of the hot sands. In Fiji the natives abandon their red and white stripes when they go Ashing on the reef in the full glare of the sun aud blacken their faces. In the Sikkim hills, also tho natives blacken themselves round the eyes as a protection from the glare of the sun on newly-fallen snow. Dr. Bowles con cludes that heat is not the direct cause, of sunburn, but that it is probably caused by the violet or ultra-red rays of light which are reflected from snow. MaVIng Monev Anvwhere. ITavlng read Mr. Mooroln ad's exper ience plating with gold, silver aud nickel. I .sent for a plater aud have moro wo k than I can do. It Is surprising tho sno ns. casfrs and jewelry tnai peopio want Hated. Tho first week I clr a ed S"7. 10, and iu three weeks SU9.85, and my wife has uni "o about as I have. By addressing V. II. Griflith & Co., Zanesville, Ohio, you can get circu lars. A plater only costs S3. You can learn to use it in an hour. Can plate large or small articles, and can make money an where. A. J. Jo.Nson". Had Cincinnati Whisky. Cincinnati whisky is justly famed for the picturesque effects it produces in the man who is foolish enough to drink it. The case of Win. liothnond, who regis istercri at the police station as residing in New York, is a fair illustration, It was reported i. Patrolman .Ionian tho other night that an unknown man was seen sitting in the belfry of St. Xavb-r's church wilh hl-i feet hanging over tho side. The policeman climbed the three long ladders which led up the steeple and there found Mr. Redmond in a drunken stupor. Kcdmond was lowered by a block and tackle and locked up in a" cell for safe keening. When he was sober enough to give some account of himself h- said he had climbed the stee ple and slept there for three consecutive, nights. A max who tits rrif-ti'd meii-lro for forty :irs oiiht .o l.uo suit from 6Uyir ; rca'l whut u, nyo . Tpi.rro. (.. Jai. 10, lc87. M. ssrs P. J. Chei.ey & Co.-Gf ntlem n-I a.-. l-iuin Ho coneial raetici of tnidicine (must ortv varft. m cl vo..Ul f-ay that in nil ii vprnr i'ea t'd oMirh't'CO havo ueer 8--. it a irepaatii-n that 1 c iul.1 prescribe wl.h as uiucU ciiitu'..uctf s .ccess as I can Hall's Catarrh 'un. u-airdn ninJ by you. Hne inscribod tacicat imiii. times iiini its effect ii wondor t.,i ,....! mi l.'l kiivin coiiL-lURion that I havo l yet "lo l::d a case of Catairh that it would not I cere, ii t! v ..ould take it according to direc tions. Yours truly, I., i oonsucii, M. P.. fiice, 213 bun mit St Wo will eic tKO for nnv cana of t'r.tr.nli that cannot bo cured sih Hull's Catarrh Cure. iakeuiulcri-Hiiv. 1. J. ( Hi-'NKV & Co , I'rop3., Toledo, O. fla Sold by Drug .ists. 75c. An OM-T me Inventor. It Is very seldom that a request for a latent Is refused lo a Scottish applicant, and when it is the reason almost invari ably is that the idea has already been patented. One of the earliest Scotch in ventors in this country was old Hugh Orr. a Lochwinnoch man, during the revolutionary times. He was well known iu his life time lo Washington and tlm other American leaders, as- from his foundry came most of their iron and brass cannon. Orr invented ma-iy agri cultural implements. A Mrs. Dk. J. C. Biiowm.v. of Kansas Citv. ate opium, then got out on the roof, sang ''Annie ttonncy" and chanted -The Krcutzer Sonata" to Beethoven's notes. When Baby was sick, we gave tier Cartprfs, When ehe was a Child, ho cried for Castoria. When she became Miss. Fhe clung to Clitoris, Vaea she had Cs'ldren. the gave them Castoria, TnE engineer on a locomotive near Green Cove Springs, Fla., last week caught two partridges in his hands out of a cab. covey while Hying through the Best, casic-t to ue and chcape-t. Piso's "Remedy for Catairh. I'y druggist:. 50c. Beecuam's Pills cure Sick-Headache. The Michigan State Hoard of Health, tiniiovtnn- crmsinii utioii u comunicablc disease, advises that all pupils affected be excluded from the public schools. JACOBS OR pW rtrtE& suitELT. 3 SPRAINS. Ohio &Mi5s.r.iilI way. Office President and General Manaser, Cincinnati, Ohio "My foot tuddcaly turned and p.vc me a very severely sprained ankle. The applies tion of St. Jacobs Oil resulted ai once in a relief from pain." W.W. Peaeodv, Prett & Genl Man't-T. BRUISES, Tlfl Dolphin Street, lU'tirEcre. Md., Jan'ylS.lSW. I was bruised tad ly in hip and side by a fill and suffered se verely. St. Jacota Oil completely cured inc." Wm. CHarms, Member of Stute Legislature. UK CIMRLEt A. VOfiCLCR CO.. Ntawt. NA THAT RUT JIM. Ho vras the devil," that boy Jim. Couldn't do nuthin' at all with him R:Ked and dirty a Butersnipc Win' the cases, distributtn' type; Peltin' the neighbors on their heads With bran' new -uoins an" slug au lead. From earlv mornln' to evenin" dim He was tho "de-il. that boy Jim. Editor cussed him 'twant no goc4; Head as hard as a piece o" wood; Jest bust out in a loud hooray. An' kept right on In his hard-head way. Bnt onct when the train was passln' by An the editor's child on the Hack O. my' Jim rushed with his same don't care Right in front of the engine theie: Child was saved! But where was Jim? With tlamln' lanterns they looked for him. While the people trembled an' held their breath! 'Under the engine, crushed to death '." There in the dust and grim he lay Jim: he had given his life away: 'Twas, no use to weep for him; Ho was an' angel that boy Jim: L. F.Stanton. The Home Truth or a Foraiga PrTr. The Spanish tare a proverb dtmasiado e peliffroso'too much is dangerous." If "brevity Is the soul ot wit," this means a great deal. Ex cesses aud other imprudences in eating and drinking are productive ot one tremendous aril -the progenitor ot many others and these arc ayioug the follies to which this I'i thy saying baa dii cct application. Tho ei 11 to which we aU ide Is indigestion, to the reUef and core cf which I los tetter's Stomach Bitters has contributed uioro than any medicine which science has u'iv e:i to the American people. This invigorating stomachic and corrective is the means not oul? ot rerunning a disordered or enfeebled condition of tno dhrestlvo organs, but ot renewing healthy action of tho lonrels aud the liver. Besides this. It counteracts a tendency to rbeuma ism tul kidii'jy complaint, extirpates aud proveuti malarious disease, U a potent restorative ol strength which is falling, hastens convalescence st:d mitigates tho iuCrimties ot ase. Craxe for White BaHdings. New York city has now a craze for white buildings, and they accord admi rably with the climate. The Fifth Ave nue, the Albemarle, the Hoffman, the St. .lames, the Coleman, the new Impe rial are all white, and everyone is pleased with the tendency. Kut New York will do well to relinquish all notion of burn ing soft coal if she wishes to dress In white. A WONDERFUL PAPKR. When you were reading the large Pros pectus of The Youth's Compaxion, pub lished lust week iu our columns, did you stop to consider what a wealth of talent was engaged hi producing this remarkable paper? Its success is phenomenal, and it Is read in 450,000 families because It is the best of Its kind. Now Is tho time to send your subscription. S1.73 sent at once will secure you the rest of this year free, in cluding nil the Holiday Number'. The Yocnt's Companion, Boston. An Old Law lu Vogue In the Lord's day observance act of Charles II. there is a provision allowing 'milk" to be cried in the streets during certain hours, but the Sheffield incor poration does not consider that famous statute sufficiently stringent, and they have accordingly made a by-law in tended to put down all street cries what ever on Sundays. Last Wednesday threo milk venders were actually summoned for calling out 'milk" in certain streets on a Sunday morning, though no com plaint had been made against them by residents concerned. London Truth. You make no mistake If you occasionally give your children Dr, Bull's Worm De strovora. It is a nice enndy and whi e it n-ivor does hmmit sometimes does a wortd of good. Death of a Veteran. Feodor von Freimann. a veteran of the Franco-Russian war of 18 IS, died re cently at the age of ll." years, in St. Pe tersburg. He served in the Russian army twenty-five years, and received a cross of St. George for his bravery. At the age of Ht) he married a 17-year-old girl by whom he had two children. For the last fifty years he has made a daily practice of drinking a pint of cognac just before going to bed. Nkaiilv every article sold Is cheapened, iu cost of production, at expense of quality. Dobbins' Electric Soap is exactly to-duy whnt. it was in 16.. alisoiutcly pure, harm less and uniform. Ask your grocer for it. Damp '-r Cold lietfs. According to medical protest against damp or cold beds, warming pans should come into fashion again. One medical I writer says: "Not only the guests, but me iuiiiii sum i m- -uiiuiij ui i-.-t-jni; in coid rooms and chilling their bodies at a time when they need all their bodily heat, by getting between cold sheets. Even in warm, sunny weather a cold. J damp bed will get in its deadly work. It is neeuiess pern aim iih; iicicci. 10 pro vide dry rooms and beds has iu it the elements of murder and suicide." "Eveht work requires a proper mothod." Hal tne troublo 01 houo-cleanin results lioui lack of common. scq,so means. Use SA. Ohio. It is a solid ca,ko ot fceutiring boup. 'i rf it, A iiakrei. containing tomato catsup hurst with great violence in the Fulton Market, Sedalia, and besmeared the whole Institution and coiored all the hucksters a reddish yellow. ! Owing to a heavy cabbage crop, the people of Pennsylvania are preparing for an unusually fine season of sauer-kraut. Let every enfeebled woman, know it! There's a medicine that'll cure her, and the proof's positive ! 1 Here's the proof if it doesn't do you good within reasonable time, report the fact to its makers and get your money back "without a word but you won't do. it The remedy is Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription and it has proved itself the right remedy in nearly every case of female weakness. It is not a miracle. It won't cure everything but it has ' done more to build-up tired, enfeebled and broken - down women than any other medi cine known. Where's the woman who's not ready for it? All that we've to do is to get the news to her. The medicine will do the rest. Wanted Women, First to know it. Second to. use it. Third to be cured by it. The one comes of the other. The seat of sick headache is not in the brain, Regulate the stomach and you cure it Dr. Pierce's Pellets are the little regulators. LUMBER, SASH, D00BS, ETC. It- tailed at wholesale prices. Oar Company la not a n-eraber ot tho Nor hwes'era Lumber Pool. Lence can rell t) cnnsum-r-i. and uwent.y requext any nno nesting anytnics in onr line to (end to us lor delii fed prices at your neare IR.it. -tatio i. Vldrcsi PineviUe Lumber Co., UinneauolU. i. MOTWRS.pipf per parkucftentpovfcpaM. with full t-.-trutla. C DK. SNYDER. "Lock Boa M. Ctr4ca Oat aUDiTIOM TIIW PArCR ni iu TMam. f ammr the creat foot rmdy tor aak PtUlNt, teg ib ft mulim. Iataa ralttf for eoM or panaMa ft Ob ula Tair-rc. or Mot fr on raea'ptaf facta. Bam pi packac I' at tnrc. or rnaUM far a dim. """ i,abtotrra. tbb rents co, world ffLOa, W.T. PAJMIS! Xnstrnctlona FREE to inventor. W Write at once tor hand-book of CUu Waahlngtoa. D.O. ASTHMAPJKf&FREEl ayaUaaiaatmra r..taamAM..T-i,mm. Ca t ar r h la a complaint which aaVrts aeart? er-rbadr. mora or ). It oriilnataa ia a cold, or succes sion of colds, combined wit impure blood. D,ss areoabte flow from the ncse. tickling ia the tkroatoffeBslv breath, osla over and between tbe vea. rint:in- sod bursting aoiaea In the ears. are the more common symptom. Catarrh Is cured by Hood'a FanapaiiUs. which, strikes dlrcctlr at it rau'e br removing aU impttntiea from the Hood, building up the diseased tissue", and giving healthy tone li the whole system. Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold by aU druggists. t:sisfor& Prepared oahr I by C. I. HOOD a CO. Lowell. Mass. tOO Doses One Dollar Both the method and reaulta itbi Bjrapof Figs is taken; it is pleasant aad refreshing to the taste, and acta lentljyetpromptljOattheKidneTt, Liver and Bowels, cleaasea the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. 6yrup of Figs is the) enly remedy of its kiad ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt ia He actio and truly beneficial in ita affects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, ha many excellent qualities com mend it to all and havo made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50a aad $1 bottles by all leading drag gists. Any reliable drugpik who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it Do not accent any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIB SYRUP COL 9AM fMAMOOCO. CAL. umnu mt. f av romr. r.r. MOTHERS' FRIEND Bakes CHILD BIRTH S3 if uato aspona cqnpinbmkwt. Book to "IfoTUtu'' MAUioTtia riKLt BEO LATMB C, ATLAltTa. 4M BOLD f LL OBCOCISIS. TuH's Pills Taa Bra de fl aartmtaliM the iavmlM firing aHMt j otmlaO. hoayaacy of bod GOOD DIGESTION. lagalat tin in 1 1 nil inllif flnh PrlcfSSc PENSIONS! Tne Otaablllty BUI la a law. Holdlera diaablad ainra taewarareantlUad. Oepandeotwtdowa ad parents saw dependent waoae aoa died toui eSaotaofnnv aerrlea are Included. If you wtah ronrolalrBanaad- tuejassr Bw JAMES TMitEir. Later-oaantlaalonesof Traaloaa.aMllllTCa B. C A ROBBER OR THIEF la better than the lying scale agent who tell yon as gospel truth that the Jones' $60. S Ton Wagon Seals U not a standard scale, and equal to any made. For free book and price Hat, address Jones of fiiogtamioi, Biiaatoa, I.T. UalrCS.ne Dr I-e ic'lriodlcarPITla.fraai JVb, 1'ruai E.taV.Mdla Kir.p., MJ, Eiaif. lanCaMfa. krJ;UaiUdSM, Urf. CufMilwyp it sV s;iiatilat.awl mUlydmatiumla, Safi.kvralax.ral'akl tVyiitliil Baaaott.Ukrudurlsf prMiKj- Tkl4.-g aaaswtMa t llat a-akhla4. an liatito U U 4km rol of inaiawaf aaf) Snptw awKlfiiiilen. CMiiauii fnoalWj) aafaf'" ' lio4iio.Ua4iiUkrtuamnn. taraor SfMSS. aw ti!, la atVa Mat) 1T. iawlpl f acUa- TU Aaata, V ' "l aM t snviwicit a D-ciAxq, Bass " VTastaale aai "tataU Afwkk LlTlfSIIUIw WaMblnstn.u. B.C. Successfully ProsecutClaris, I " vr-u lat war. 13r(UifcaUtiUiiii., atlr mt I wWiX vaV mM ttM fl THE POSITIVE CURE. MIS aaHHHiaXTanOTaUt9.MW-atamK. Sew York. IttMWctaVaE-SSlJSy BB BBaBaBaBaB OSra EKJOYS X-JHCH"says Iriughbtobedonc? b av W-aBBBr-r. -w -- r Oujghrsrainds for norhing. The house oudhh to be cfeajied- wibh Sapolio.TvyQuCke inyour ncevwer " nexh house-cleaning And be convinced. "IGNORANCE of ill3 !.ecuses man," and ignorance is no excuse for a dirty house or greasy kitchen. Better clean them in the old way than not at all ; but the modern and sensible way is to use SAPOLIO on paint, on floors, on windows, on pots and pans, and even on statuary. To be' ignorant of the uses of SAPOLIO is to be behind the age. Catarrh Cured, ONE OEUTl 1701 sarflar from Catarrh, in vo Inforzaw. It Uyonrdntr fo tiii-sMI ar.l UmVr tn ofj'afn Ih sasaa- ot a certain cure before it Is tio Uts. TtiU you can ! 1 an xp jf )u ,t for a ijsUr card, bv ssscUoa your nam and at na U Pro. J. A. tjawrenre. "ork. ub w 11 nt ou PRKC br rsmm mail, a copy nt t ie nnsi-ist recipe f..r pr-pari c t lm nml .t-.ua, t remeitr trr Useawarad Iwrthseure of Catarrh la alllt. vanoui at-. 0rrtn- million (aicsof tt.ii.ir.adtul. dl-ans Ing and ott-'i tim- f' dtfaabav.acareI pArruaieutiyu r.nrf tho pi-tiv years l)TUi nm of tnla aa-dlclne. Write lo-dy tor t'ds PREK reipa. ,t timel u maj .-a yon from t ii. dat-i toiN Of OaaawnBUon. DO UT OLaVAl lonaer. if you oe-'-esKp-pdy avl p-fna it i-.ir- Atdrt-s Prut J. A. UkXtliKSCc. lSa W'Hrreu .Street. a.r York. PISO'S REMEDY FOR CATARRH Ecst. Easiest to use. Cheapest. Relief is inBtttiate. A cure 13 certain. For Cold in the Usad It has no equal. It is an Ointment, of which to the nostrils. Price, 50c. by mail. Address, E. T. N PEN8ION LAW. TMUV.SA!fDS NOW R.NTITt.KU WHO HAVEMJT HKCN ENTITLED, address 1st forms tor application sad toll infer! laBea WM. W. DUDLEY, IB coatsosaioNKR op rzxsioxa, ABerasr at Law, WaatvUs-toB. IX Cb Otsatton this PaperJ iaAsITa7n Tbcaddreasrsot soldiers who WvswiSW S Ba hometeaded a ls number cf soldiers' r;., HOMESTEADS. ioSrl OTJSON. Osavsr. Colondc wsTMennoa ttls paper. m bbIbwII ""--iA'.'etTfcs... ft Cfllt III Basil TWaatt.ft vltalUr. Private a4 Serreos Blsraaev araS 'BEX (waM). ciras crABANTEta. - tZZFEEPJ tBsiaWBCICALI5TITi:ia,WlswaasaCw Daagerca't tenlenci- rharctrize that rv coo: won affscUon. catarrh In the head. The foul matter droppiag intj tli- bronchial tnbee or lungs i very liable lo lead t bronchiUs or coa snmptton. A catarrh originate i in nupnrltlea In the blood, local app'icatloa can do bnt llttlo good. Tre common-sense method of treatment la t purity the blood, aad for this purposo there la no preparation superior to Hood's Sarnapiriila. The powerful action ot this medicine upon th blood expe.s every Impurity asdeurss catarrh. Sold by aU druggists. S! : six for fJ. Prepared oaly by C. I. HOOD ft CO. Lowell, llw. ! KM) Doses One Dollar -VASELINE- FOR A OSE-llI.I..n llll.I. snt in tar mf. we w.U deliver, frer of aticliaNc.t any j?Morln the Unlled Siat.-. all ot tUe foliow.lii articles, care ful y packed: On two-ounce bott e ot Pure VaxeUne IOcN. One to-ounce bottle o. Vaeliue Foiuad.... 1 Oz.t Jar of V.nlt Colli freani J , On-.-aaeof Vaaelme t"a nh r I-e r One cake oCVaeltneS at. undented W Oneeakeot V-eellneHoai fVi i kIMv.i -tnted .5 One two-ounce bottle ot While Vaselinr ... '- t.l) Or.frp"taji'tM-np.ii'tt; unj trt!ctf at t.'ie price named. On no acctun: he x-,i in! to wceptr -i. your tirugoUt any r,inlinm or pr-p-imthti tlkerjfron nnlei bibelot cilo-:rn i i. bvattityon toll certain Ig receive an iauZtticst tc 'A Art. little or w ratue. ChelM-tu;lt Mi'i- Co.. j4 .tu!e St.. N. V fir Mf(T 413 FiiUl 9tntt ur. VVUUli, SIOUX CITY, IQW1 Retiular Graduate in MrOktee-SS Y Vfan Kotpital ami prirale practice lO in Chicago and A( York- Ka- M ktabtlalaed lu Mus eily .Nine jVSaBmlJtrear-i- still trt-atlaiT all 1'rlvMte. SBk"Bmfjfff Nervoua. Chronic and iieclal BjftJBJBJBdlaeaae. S p v r m a t o r r h o.-. Neaniaal wcakneu (night lws', Iiiipotencjr Jless of terual rvrar). and all female llisc:t.eH rrrgiuaritif. tU: Cure KurRteetl or doner refunded Charge fair. Term. catn. Age and exierIonc niv imi.)nant. ro lr- tnrious medicine used .Vo tlr.r ht from work or mslneas Patient at a ilMin- treated lyiaail MedUinrs tent trtruuhere re from pne annbrr-ik'-not State your rar unit (nil for Opinion aud teraa Consultation Mrlrtly c.nC.leillnl. peraon. ally or by letter-Dr. WOOD hnw Uie larsrett Medical and Sureicnl Institute and kt aad Ear Intlrmarr in the V-t-i ooma ror patleota at rnlr rate..fi IM;io- t. meet any fruer aency A Oulet Hume and enre ami Wt Joy LatHs during Prranancu and Crmflnrment Sunl lo. pottxee forlllu-trutcd ROOK hii.I UEllCAt -lOUftNAL. tFMentton hl iobt.. WSMSCRfUL GCHA1R C0aHJiiNc5Ani:cuy rilRNITURE INVALID 5Aa'?'vv,sj a-aau WHEEL CHAIRS Warafailattaof"icji ibi'tl ht1r-j r"e". Ana FREE and aetp s"o"" ti paid for on dehvo: Rand atamn for C wiuaLi-tiisi HlUC raxuLfRSB. l,n. .iu yiUtmretL LVuena mfu. ca. i-3& .. nth et. rujak.r.i. DELIVtKt. L ENIS' 98 LYE! triES-sei) Tho s',ti.jrf nud purest I.ya inn-le. Will niako tho ltKT IVr'i:inel IIaud S"ap In twonty innti a ri'r.v" toiling. It la tli liM'.t for lii!irctire aitika eloieli. tlrnln. washing bottles,. ItatreU. i-a:titi, etc. PENNA. SALT MANUF'6. tOC Gen Arts. Phila.. 1'. Tbt Oldest Mtdicint in ike Wr!Jit tfmUj BR. IKAAriIO-iflPKOM-SL CELEBRATED EYE-WATEIa. rlpiton. ami Ha lern lu cuntntit u foe nrarlr . jsatury. There are f-irdleae to uhlcii mankind ire ubject more distressing Itmr. Mire eyes, and tone, prrharrt. for which n'ore remed'es ha taees rffad without nieces Frirall extenud lutlammattoa ortbeeveattN an lafatllht' rm-ily. If thr dtreo Uont are followed II will -iever t .11. Wepartlcularly tavlte the at' nt r.n of -nt.lclans lu jner'ta--Jjl' jal.-l.yall.lruK:WU JOHN THOMPtJON. SO 4 CO Taor. '. Y. &tabllshed il.'. 30RE WELLS ! QrVll M.irhlit iar. tfamnnt MQNET! :iuill ILR'.oLV..ri rliMl'L! llifydolni;eHKknna T-M:.ATff.K ii:ofit. Ihey Ir IMII MTrlUwhrrr Mbrra flf.: Any Ire. 2 incurs to tt iiiclirt iiamrttr LQ0MIS & NYMM, TIFFIN, - OHIO. Catalogue FREF! ASTHMA. PODha.-n'i Asthma Sedflo (Uvea inimediata relief. It li beilevrxl to bo til Pent ASTHMA kpmejy kn w:i U huiuaeitr. An evMcrjco we kito m Trial rncku HKKK. fc'ol.l liy lJrusrjciats. -ertby natiX. Foitpald. THOS. ToPHA'-r 2l ':: Avenue. Phila la. a small particle is applied Sold by drupziats or sent Haztltinf., Warren, Pa. FAT FOLKS; lai. ScaCic.forclrctilarinBiJ t , Rmlncnl .'. moi.tA hv .a. nnf iinitapet lerbet 1 1 cmai starrW . ro - " f ..mrv3 ii mm". ..i.iau.lilj. HI lk! n, Name this paper wheu yon write. PATENTS mveators Oul tie, or How to Ob tain a 1'at- nt.il(ntr,n PATRICK Q-FARRELL. AttV t L '.WasUlo!fuJ)C F RKEHAN A MONKY. Whtn.r. n n. H. D. Sfocer. It years member o C'o'.k s- .v. a. sikhw, w jesrs asb t u. . A'.ly Ucn- S65 A 'MONTH O Briaht Yonna Men ot Snd B ar.l lor 9 l.lrttoa in ni-h Cminlr P. Vf . ZIEGLER CO St.I.oals. Me. ' . O. N. W. No. 4aSjt. BlTC BaWSmsl LUBUR eor Cmm vgOtWim JHO LSHSf afaW VCp3l i Vwaf,Tav9B3 Mi tW "' V! X. KrasaSS.- tmmM mnimmxM lHiRK53R tl 1 I r SVTfBaaaSBawa ita- Mv.'tiiTl 7Ca. VLV " m. wscti"ty' WB1IUH'-& rSBwSBa4BrafBVerJ ?Pi!',4 "V CI j- i U - I r T A 14 i. a t t ' f - i 1- : -4 3vw