II I E BEE : OMAHA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 15, 1912. "-THF, OMAHA DAILY BEE rOfNDED 3Y KUWARD ROSBWATKR VICTOR ROSE WATER. EDITOR. j BEE BUILD1XU. FARNAM AND 1TTH. "Kntered at Omaha Postoffiee as second- class matter. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Sunday Bfeft, one year J2. Saturday Bee. one year I.&o Bally Bee (without Sunday) one year. M 00 Dally Bee and Sunday, one year $6.i)0 DELIVERED BY CARRIER. Evening Bee (with Sunday), per m..25c Daily Bee (Including Sunday, per mo.fioe Daily Be (without Sunday), per mo.. 45c Address all complaint or irregularities In delivery to City Circulation Depi,. "remittances. Remit liy draft, express or postal order, payable to The Bee Publishing company. Only 2-cent stamps received in payment of small accounts. Personal checks, ex cept on Omaha and eastern exchange, not accepted. " offIc5I Omaha The Bee building. South Omaha 2318 N St. i Council Bluffs-75 Scott St. I Incoln-26 Little building. Chicago 1041 Marcuette building. f Kansas City-Reliance building. f New York-34 West Twenty-third.- " . Washington 72S Fourteenth 8t., N. w. ; i CORRESPONDENCE. . Communications relating to news ana ' editorial matter should be addressed ; Omaha Bee. Editorial Department. JULY CIRCULATION. " 51,109 Itate of Nebraska, County of Douglas, s. D wight Williams, circulation manager 5f The Bee Publishing company, being July sworn, says that the average dally circulation for the month of July, 1913, was 6U09. DW1GHT WILLIAMS. Circulation Manager. Subscribed In my presence and to before me this M day of August 1912. (Seal.) ROBERT HUNTER, 1 ' Notary Public. Sabacrtbera leTtsj the eltr temporartlr - have The Bee malle to them. A4dre will be cha-ged m lte a re "Why vote for Taft?" Just Bow you love your country. to - It Is not gurprtalnt to know that that aviation school In the east went up Into the air. Georgia's Shame. Georgia, the most progressive state In the south In many ways, is held in the rear by a certain bad 'ele ment when it comeB to a matter of respect for law and anti-race prejudice. In 1912 it had eighteen lynchings, three times its number of legal executions. Kentucky, which was second In lynchings, had only eight. The stereotyped defense of negro lynching Is its reflection of a super ior regard for womanhood, but even if all such depredations were to avenge wrongs to women which is not the case the defense would still fall to the ground In Georgia, where but recently a posse of white men beat a white girl to death for a trivial cause. But the state's disgrace lies chiefly in the fact that these men seem to have escaped punishment en tirely. It is small wonder, there fore, that a little while later forty white men rush Into a court room at Columbus, Ga,, overpower the of ficials, seize a negro boy just con victed of manslaughter, when the rabble demanded first degree mur der, and take nlra out and lynch him. These bloodthirsty bandits did not even take the pains to conceal their Identity, showing their con fidence in the state of public senti ment that would meekly tolerate, if, Indeed, not acquiesce in such an act of outlawry. The redeeming feature for Georgia is that its leading newspapers, re flecting, of course, the best senti ment of the people, deplore and con demn such archaic and wanton dis regard for law and order. But the facts show what a herculean task the majority hag with the unbridled minority. v ohni Backward Iks Day in Omahi C-MP1U-D 1H3M r tt FlfcE-a r 1 AUGUST 1 A lot of natural gag was wasted before the city and gas company compromise was reached. - .1 ' Mr. Perkins may be one of the common people, but Bradstreet'a and Dun's do not so rate him. The senate's passage of a parcels post measure is another reminder that Tom Piatt has been dead a long time. Those who were looking for any special animation in Governor Wil ; son's pronunciamento must be amused. Now that the Madison (Wis.) con ference on reforming the press has been beld, watch all the faults of the press disappear. i , j Kansas City now proposes to vary the monotony of immaculate virtue by nretending it ia bad, so U haa F scared up a'pollca graft story. w.,r'.- !. . - ! ... ..... i,',. i. i i, i . -. '. ' ' tvir . That ; demented" colored "damsel """""looking for Jack Johnson will find him about as easily as some of his OJi late professional antagonists nave, "Thou shalt not steal." But the bull mooeer proposing: to launch a national weekly tried to steal Mr. Bryan's associate editor, just the . tame. ';- , , One way for a deputy sheriff to keep from finding a man he does not wish to serve with a legal sum mons is to shut his eyes when he sees his man.: , If Eugene Debs is not constantly on the. alert he win wake up some fine morning to discover that a cer lain ambitious candidate has stolen away with all his thunder, lightning and wind and the "makln s." California Laws Give Rich Game Monopoly. Headline. Oh, surely this Is a mistake. Cali fornia's governor, who dominated the last legislature and righted all existing wrongs, is too good a bull mooser for that. We have, the colonel's own word for it, as a faunal naturalist, that "the bull mooBe is the most selfish of beasts" and that "under all cir cumstances he will be found looting out for his own Interests, to the ex clusion of others." N In the days of 1898 Nebraska had as many state committees as it has now. The list included, besides the established party organizations, all- ver republicans, gold democrats and two wings of the , prohibitionists But the extras didn't last long. ' This new movement is a move ment of truth," says the bull moose Every time he makes a new promise one's mind reverts to "Under no cir cumstances will I be a candidate tor or accept another nomination. "Words are good and only so when backed by deeds." Federal Aid to Good Boads. Senator Overman's amendment to the postoffiee appropriation bill, passed by the senate , with the Bourne-Brlstow parcels post plan. proposing definite appropriations for good roads, was defeated, but not be cause the senate is unfriendly to or uninterested in the matter of federal aid to this enterprise This was shown by the adoption of another amendment providing for an investi gating committee of three members from each house to report to con gress on federal aid for good roads at the earliest possible time. The Overman amendment, which pro posed to appropriate 250,000 to every state setting aside an equal sum for highway improvement, seema only to have been a little in advance of its time, or possibly just this plan may prove inexpedient in some detail upon further investiga tion. It serves to bring out more clearly the fact that the federa) gov eminent is earnestly and deeply in sympathy with the good roads move- ment: that it appreciates the eco nomic value of modern highways in the country and stands ready to co operate with states upon the best practical basis. The movement is not retarded by deliberation. It is no longer so much a question cf the feasibility of federal aid, as it is one of method! Crept and Business : Thus far official estimates place this country's probable production of wheat, corn and pats, this year at 600,000,000 bushels' more than last year. And rye and barley, also with heavy gains, are yet to come. ' From all over the west, especially, come reports of enormous crops. ' For In stance California's deciduous fruit crop is said to be a record breaker. Washington and Oregon have similar tales to tell. These reports dove tail nicely into conditions , in Ne braska.: Kansas and other middle western states. Hand in band with this glowing prospect- and some harvests are really over goes a general expansion in trade, not only in the west, but the east and outh as well. ? Man! festly it is to be a year of improve ment and renewed activity upon every hand. Whatever restrictive influence the national campaign may have is not being as platnl- this year as is common to presidential years, which is very remarkable when one considers tne ) almost unpre cedented confusion and complexity of the political situation. Good crops an4 business, after all, are im pervious to rantankerous politics. Thirty Years Ago The call for a republican convention for the Third judicial district to be held at Blair Is out under the names of J. M. Chapman, chairman, and W. 1. Baker, secretary. At the city council meeting form charges were preferred against the city marshal for falling to do a lot of things he was supposed to do. Miss Mary Andrew will give art lessons at her studio above Max Meyer's store, Farnam and Eleventh streets. Mies Carrie Mason gave a birthday party at the residence of her parents, 804 Pierce street, with about twenty friends present. . All departments of the B. & M. gen eral offices are to be closed in respect to the memory of H. M. Smith, late as sistant general freight agent. The operetta "Penelope" was given at Masonic hall for the benefit of Trinity church. , . Olds for tSo.COo Omaha sewer bonds un- r,!ng twenty years at ( per cent were opened. The highest bidder was the Ver mont Savings bank at Battleboro, offer 110. A phaeton belonging to P. H. SharPe ran away on Farnam, colliding with a buggy near Thirteenth driven by Miss Belle Kimball, who, however, was not seriously hurt. The Paxton hotel under the hands of painters is assuming a gorgeous appear ance. Henry N. James, newly elected super intendent of schools, arrived from Cleve land to look over the ground. Frank W. Bandauer of the Union Pa cific land department was married to Miss Emily Krejcl. daughter of a Fill more county farmer, by Judge Beneka. Twenty Years Agw 1 The Nobles of the Mystic Shrine are formally welcomed to Omaha by Mayor Bemls, Who presents them with the key to the city to do with It as they please. The ceremonies were In the spacious rotunda of the Paxton hotel and Judgt W. O. Btrawn acted as master of ceremonies. Dorsey B. Hauck had a pleasant sur prise In meeting up with three fellow Bhrlners from Washington, D. C, the Fe&ke brothers, with whom he had been associated in the same commandery twenty-five years before. Charles Moss, who clerked in a store at 1513 Webster street, was knocked down by three young toughs at night and the trio fell Into the hands of the police. - Miss E. Shugalt of "Lincoln was visit ing her cousin, Miss Grace Marti, 2223 Harney street. Sam N. Wolback of Grand Island, an aspirant for gubernatorial honors, came in with a fez in bis pocket and viewed the camels, from afar. John Butler left for Columbus Junction. Ia.. to make an address at the reunion of the Fifth Iowa Infantry ef which he was member during thp civil war. Ten Years Ago- Central Labor union adopted a resolu tion demanding that Governor Savage ask i. W. Thomas to resign from the newly appointed fire and police board and that the governor name Harry McVea, presN dent of Central Labor union, for the place, thus living up to his promise to recognize labor on , the board. , , The Second Ward Republican club en dorsed the candldaoy of A. C. Troup for the district court and that of Corliss p. Hopper for the Board of Education. Tha Club met at 1435 South Sixteenth street Grocers, butchers, gardeners and huck. iters were planning a stock company for the erection of a market house that shall ne independent of the city. "We've got to have a home of our own now," said C, I Porter, chairman of the wholesale committee of the Retail Grocers' associa tlon. A committee from the city council and one from the Board of Education met t perfect arrangements for a game of ball at Vinton street park for the benefit of the Auditorium fund. The city council committee comprised Councilman Zlm- man and Hoye and City Clerk Elbourni the Board of education was represented by Superintendent Pearce, Theodore John son, J. J. Smith and W. ft. Homan. Theo dore Johnson waa made captain of the board's team and Fred Hoye of the coun cil bunch. Rev. El F. Trefs and I, E. Congdon were named as umpires. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur English left for a fishing trip Around the Minnesota lakes. Rev. Robert Yost, pastor of St. Mary's -Avenue Congregational church, and Mrs, Tost went to Pittsburgh to attend the funeral of Rev. M. M. Sweeney, father of Mrs. Yost ' ' The Roosevelt party signalizes Its ad vent la the political field by an act of injustice that gives the lie to all Its pro fessions of political progress. The action of the Roosevelt convention In excluding negro delegates on the ground of color alone, and without reference to the regu larity of their election or the form of their credentials, draws the color line In new form and gives open aid and com fort to the persistent attempt In some of the states to nullify the constitution and not only disfranchise but dlscUlsenis the negro. It is too late In the day now, many years too late, to discuss the merits Lincoln's emancipation act or the wisdom of enfranchising the negro; these are long accomplished facts and their results are prt of the national history and th i national life. From Sheriff McShane's action in the South Omaha case and his ap pointment of a man for deputy sher iff who, while awaiting trial in dis trict court, wears an alias, what do some of the "better element" voters of Omaha, who helped, to put him into office, think of their "young Mister McShane" by now? Miss Jane Addams' great service to the world rests upon the principle of social Justice without a color line. She surely does not endorse the bull moose action of- denying a place to the negro in the great movement that is to alleviate all the ills and pains of humanity and lift us at once to a state of idealism. ' The party with which the third, termer was so long connected and which con ferred upon him office after office, could point to nothing la its honorable career more honorable than Its defense of the civil and political rights of the men that Lincoln lifted from slavery and started on the way to citlsenshjp. Now comes the renegade leader of the new party and tries to win in desperate attempt to perpetuate his official career by declaring that the men whom Titnceln freed and by whose suffrages the third termer himself as so often profited shall not sit in a convention with Ms white followers. Let ua consider for a moment the politi cal tendency and moral effect of this action. Nearly fifty years have passed since the enactment' of the constitutional People Talked About ; Rats, . It might seem that a great federal government were engaging in small business to make war on rats, but that js the latest means adopted by the United States for resisting the possible spread of the bubonic plague from the Pacific to the Atlantic, Happily our government engages in the campaign before a crisis or emer gency arises. It is not disposed to wait until the patient la dead before administering the medicine. Bubonic plague never exists upon our shores except in sporadic cases, so that this precaution by the gov ernment is not to be misapprehended as an alarm of present danger. The action is none the less urgent and wise, for if, as scientists now firmly believe, this malady is communicated by rodents, the proposed plan, if successfully carried out, should have the effect of precluding what might otherwise call for curative measures, He must be tired, standing all this i IV' , I If Sixty-four years a resident of California. and 81 years old, Mary Josephine Melvin, born In Ireland, tottered into a San Francisco court and filed her first papers to become a citiien. 6wng to the high cost of other neces- s&rlas of life, Detroit's grafting aldermen stuck to prices ranging from $100 to taOft, the latter figure covering the commission of the leader. V : Colonel Cole Blease of South Carolina is no respector of wealth In distributing hot air certificates of disrespect. His latest exploit is to consign a malefactor of .great wealth to. a front seat In the An-nlas club. ' Former Senator Nelson W. Aldrlch of Rhode Island proolalms himself "a cltlsen farmer" permanently retired from public life, Tha simple Joys and scenic witchery of the countryside so deeply Impresses the old-time senatorial leader that the creaking of the famous machine Interests him no more, m Brevity and simplicity In will-making scores again.. On a sheet of ordinary note paper, without date, Mrs. Florence N. Nlmlck ' of Pittsburgh expressed her wishes on the disposal of an . estate of $1,000,000, and the courts held the docu ment to be unbreakable. The first report made to the authorities under the new Industrial accident oonv pensation 'law of Massachusetts, cover ing the mont ef July last,, shows thirty two fatal accidents. Of this number nine teen were In the service of employers n sured under the law and twelve left rl atlves wholly dependent on their support 1'nder the termc of the law these de pendents will receive one-half the weekly wsges of the deceased covering a pertod of aOO weeks, totaling T,81 Liability In the other case amount to only f&fOQi DISFEANCHISEMENT OF THE NEGRO Eevenal of Policies on Which Bepublictn Party Was Founded. Indianapolis News (Ind. rep.). amendments that made the freed men cltl- sens and during that period the race has made wonderful progress. A new genera tion has como upon the stage and taken up the duties of citizenship where the old one left off. American born and bred. loyal to the government by instinct and by training, 'sons of the soil like their fathers before them, they are without any taint of anarchism or' of the various forms of socialism that we not only admit but almost welcome In foreign-born Illiter ates. Our colored citizens do not have to be assimilated or Americanised ; they have been born Into the body politlo and re part and parcel of the people. They do no send money out of the country er expect to leave It- They are here to stay and all they ask Is to be treated as Ameri cans. There are nearly 10,000.000 of them ta tha United Statea-to be exact ,K8,3 with a proportionate number of voters. To disfranchise these voters, to relegate them to a political serfdom only less op pressive and Intolerable than actual slav ery would not be progress nor a square deal. On the contrary. It would be a long step backward toward conditions which the republican party spent the best years of Its political existence in fighting. And who can doubt that denial to these citi zens of representation In political conven tionis is a step toward denying them the right of representation In law making bodies and even the right of suffrage itself? Aside from the Infamy of the act it shows the towering egotism of a des perate political" schemer who hopes by such methods to win political support to a section of the country where he does not stand the ghost of a ehanee. GELNS AUD GS0AKS. a terrible dream ktst night that! had died and gone "I ad dreamed heaven." "Well, didn't heaven seem to be a beau tiful place?" "Oh. yea, it was beautiful enough; but It seemed that the speed limit was fifteen miles an hour everywhere." Chicago Record-Herald. Ethel Jack Huggard told me a long story last night. Kitty Is he an Interesting story telter? Ethel 1 should say so; he held his au dience from start to finishBoston Tran script "So it seems when you started to thrash your wife, she armed herself with the rolling pin and whipped you first How do you explain that?" "I guess it was because she beat me to H." Baltimore American. "Didn't uu say it was going to b the hottest summer on record?" "Yes," replied the confident weather prophet. "But those cool days were very pleasant. What's the use of making it disagreeable for everybody simply for the sake of having your own way?"- Washington Star. "Mr. Spooner, I think I like you better than any of the other fellers that come to our house." 'Why so, Bobby r " 'Cauao when you give sister a box a' candy sho always turns It over to me-" Chicago Tribune. - "Well, Jingle." said the manager, "did you make the sale?" '"Yes," said the salesman. "I couldn't get the darned old machine to run over half speed, but I arranged with one of the town constables to arrest us for ex eeedlns; the spaed limit and old Skee- zicks fell for it right away.'-Judge. A report like a pistol shot rang out on the air, and Uncle Silas Jumped ner vously, . . . . . "JlasBy sake!" he cred, "what was that? Anybody been shot?" "Oh. no," smiled his city cous;n, that only an automobile." "Oh," said the old man. "Somebody dis. chargln' his sho w-foor?" Harpers Weekly. , , TEE ROAD OP BITOT. Detroit Free Press There's a fceap.of bluff In this world, my boy. And a lot that Uo't so; And many will ten you the road of bluft Is the road you ought to go. They'll tell you It y to make mea think Tou are what you re really not put Just make good as you go along And you won't have to bluff a lot. You will see sometimes a bluffer stand Face front, where the heroes are. But hia heart Is weak, and te wU come, He'll Quit If the road be far. And what seemed goo when the path was fair And the skies above were blue Will loom as It is when the trial comes, And only the good will do. So turn from the road of bluff, my boy, And travel the narrow way. Where every deed Is a deed well done, And the bluffer dare not stray. Make good as you go along, my boy. And you'll never need to bluff. And vou'lt never fear any test that comes It you're built of the proper stuff. A i PROSPERITY RISES ABOVE PARTIES Largest and Most Profitable Harvest in Sight. ( New Tork. Svenlng Post In the history of American politics, many diverse Influences have contributed to theturnlng of popular majorities to the one side or the other after the cm paign was under way; and one of those influences la the condition of business. This principle has usually operated in such a way that good times In, a presi dential year were always helpful to the party in power and were frequently a decisive factor. All political experience goes to show that people who are pros perous are disposed to vote for contin uance In office of the party under which prosperity prevailed, and that people con fronted with hard times In their own af fairs are apt to follow any party which proposes changes In legislation and prom ises restored good times as a result of them. After a checkered and uncertain sea son, It is beginning to appear that the country will have this year one of the largest and most profitable harvests In its history. The wheat crop will prob ably be the largest, with one exception, in half a dozen years, and 40,000,000 to 50,000,000 bushels above 1M1; the oats crop will surpass all precedent; the corn crop promises to run close to the largest of our past harvests, snd prices for all these products are on a basis profitable to the farmers, by reason of the deficient yield of all of them, last year. There la little dissatisfaction over the cotton crop outlook; the south, will not duplicate the unprecedented harvest .of last year, but because of that fact the planter's lately acute apprehension prices la removed. of ttonremuneratlvs By all the larger tests something like genuine business revival is at least fairly In sight. Labor is unusually well em ployed. The country's iron output for last month far exceeded the highest July record In our history, and the steel In dustry Is supplied with advance orders running well Into next year. This is or dinarily the most trustworthy of all indi cations, regarding the tendency of busi ness generally. The total amount drawn In checks on the banks of th country, another test of trade conditions, last month exceeded by T or J per cent the highest figure ever previously reached at that time of year. Along with this, the condition of our money markets Is unusu ally sound and strong. In setting forth these known facts, we make no account of any such temporary and artificial reaction as sometimes oc curs as a result of political misgiving Itself; that Influence ia usually over-estimated Nor have we any idea of pre dicting what Wall street calls a "boom." The essential fact Is that we are not confronted by hard times and that the voter Is not likely to lend a ready ear to the professional agitator merely because of disturbance by trade depression. It these 'Signs of the moment are pointing the way to good times generally In the autumn, there, can be no great doubt as to whose candidacy will be hurt by them. REGULATING ARMY PROMOTIONS Provisions of Bill Favorably Eeported to the Home. Army and Navy Register. A bill to amend section S of the act of October t im, providing for the ex amination of certain officers of the army and to regulate promotions therein has been favorably reported to the house. Under this act when an officer Is found disqualified for promotion for any other reason than physical disability contracted in Hue of duty or for Jack of profes sional qualifications there Is no means of completely disposing of the case, a sep arate proceeding before an army retir ing board becoming necessary, j The ob ject of the bill la to amend this act so as to save the time and expense Involved tn placing officers before retiring board. as well as to restrict the loss of files In lineal rank sustained by an officer on examination for promotion to the actual casualties during the one year he Is sus pended from promotion. Section I "of the bill regulates the examination for pro motion in case, of majors of the medical corps so as to conform to details as re quired for other officers. Section S covers the Increased responsibility Imposed upon officers who serve on promotion boards created by the act Section 4 corrects oa the lineal list the position of all officers who have suffered a greater, loss of files by reason of the Increase of the army by legislative enactment during the period of suspension from promotion than they would nave sustained had there been no such legislation during such period. The provisos of the first and second sections of the bill provide for future cases, while the last section corrects Injustices which hav already occurred, ' There are but ten officers now in the army who have suffered unusual loss of rank due to the enactment of legislation during the period of suspension from promotion. HOW EDIT0ES SEE THINGS. Philadelphia Bulletin: That youth is not necessarily matter of years, despite the Oslerlan theory, ia proved by a Phila delphia woman, who at the age of 74 is pot only preparing to wed, but Is also about to take a trip to Europe to do it Chicago Record-Herald; An English physician makes the discouraging predic tion that In K years a majority of the people on the earth will be Insane. Per haps he got the Idea while listening to the crowd at a political convention trying to break the long distance cheering record. Brooklyn Kagle: Heney says Perkins Is spending his money because he wants to see the country made better and for no lees patriotio purpose. It is to . be a sumed that when Perkins put up the in surance funds, he wa not working to hurt the goose that lays the golden egg. Baltimore American; A defaulting county treasurer In Illinois was paroled on condition he repay the money taken. In Installments, the eourt giving him, at the Installment rate, over 150 years to pay the total sum. If he does not pay it in the given time probably the consid erate law will take more drastic meas ures with him. Springfield Republican: Mr. Bryan made a grave mistake tour years sgo In selecting Governor Haskell of Oklahoma treasurer ef he democratic aatlonal committee. The governor proved to have had a Wall street record which Hearst exposed and Roosevelt denounced in a series of statements from the White House. Tet there Is George W. Perkins of Wail street trust promoter and for merly a partner of the banking house of Morgan, which raked In a M.0O,00 fee for organising the Steal trust on a rascally ficticious capitalisation here la Georm becoming the financial manager of the Roosevelt third-term campaign. Philadelphia Record: Bismarck once remarked bitterly that Russia held the land and England held the sea, and there was nothing left for Germany but heaven. However, he was not satisfied with that and the present kaiser' said on one occa sion that "Our future Is upon the sea." That exnlalns the powerful navy Ger many is building. But England serves notice that Britannia rules the waves, snd expects to keep on doing so as long as It has the price of a battleship In Its shopping bag, and that receptacle Is not nearly empty yet Baltimore '.American: England Is aroused over thf triumph of our Olym pic athletes. Perhaps It would be un kind to mention It but there have been times when not even a. winged mercury could, have overtaken a red coat New York Tribune: . We have had some strange spectacles in labor troubles in this eountry, but there Is nothing on rec ord quite equalling that of 60,000 strikers baring their heads and praying God to kill the man against whose authority they were striking. If precisely that hadf happened here, as it has just happened In lAltdon, we should dread to read what the London papers would say about it Work O-t Both Ware, Cleveland Plain Dealer. The high cost of living Is due to ex travagance, declares Senator Burton. And the high cost of living forces us to be extravagant Doesn't it work out logically? Mateal Admiration. gt. Louis Republic, Governor Johnson of California candi date ftn' vice president on the Progres sive ticket says he would rather go dawn to defeat with Rorsevelt than to Victory with anyone else. "By George, that's bsHy." SCHOOLS AD COLLEGES. TrevcvtxTN ssasom 3 f - Art CHICAGO, lit. American Oil Conservatory Ja&ofS MUSiC AmJ Va mmtie Art Mo-m eentwt BiMtrffuMr -ctlit by odDMt-rttiMk Superior tformsi Trtlo tat Scboei oftpflr (Metiers for scknols sdcelicfM. Fnbtte Mhootmwtfc. -tnrkraci0 Vnrtmkrf hMadTMtagfw. . Twenty trMeednilps tow-L Ftll turn Win MHtr. Sttrib ttlK 111 ess-os Bil trae. JOHN . 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