Daily News, Volume 2, Number 63, Franklin, Johnson County, 1 November 1880 — Page 3
1ILYNEW
lOHDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1880. y-l"!"" ."• !-!"..- I fiaiiroab
$\mt
IV TOIB TAI!
(Carefully corrected to date.]
?bIob TVpot—T* a»b and Che*tnnt HM.. id all Mm «-*cafcU,A
T-
*eij iUy rlor i« are
fta*t Line I and Ace' *y K*.
kOut3*•..
Sr'iSir.tr: m, ihiui......
inp,
H. A SL K. (to Worth
"t*. Time Ire minute* fvtw time, or Wrrsxcb I wtbrf r»in* dally exrept
M|
Sub
~mw
%ejp-
i?t &t&»t Sunday*, Inzriutitmti- JMon Depot litw
l:» am 3:40 »pm 7:Wa
{Arrit* fntm K**Lf ft .••
El l:«5»wi
KfcU Train..**.........ft/*-..* to:
Acc
it.. 7:00 pm
I Leave gotaf Went.)
*»toelfic Kx ..
WeaL)
Y' (Arrive tram
nFivt Line..... «...., t« K«il aa4 Ac«
Train...,*,.*,.#
Uwtern Ki. .*
a
8d0
... 8t86
T1RRB HAUTE A LOGANSPORT^, rv Lofanspuri DH. ,of Vandal la A. (Leave for NortbesaL) --j Hall Tra& T.t 6:»am f!tad Train ..,^*4:00pm (Arrive from Hortfceaai.)
i-d Train .. %%.,*..., £.,,** *8:«» TRKHKIIAUTK A BVAN8VILI.K.
for Houtb.)
)Le»\r
'JN^sohvlUe K* 4iSftam l|ipr«-«n 40pm 'lit«nil Ace., iii.if-5:00# «r (Afrlvr from Mouth.)
pin
i:¥i
i€*ble*jio K* 40:45"p% ••Ight and Acc» 4:45 jf» F, f'HlCAOO A KA.STEHN ILLINOIR. §& (fe»ve for North fllnndchlcnaog* ,.. 5 7:® *n» nvllk Aw 3:10pm anbvilli and Cblcjijfo Ri 10:30 jp
I,Arrive from North.»
\fr* lltutv Acc .. 11:10 ai ilhlcjigo wnlT«trre H*nte Ex............ 3:3S p,i» k!hl »|t«And HMhvlUe B* ... 4:90kfir,
ILLINOIS MID1.AND UAII.WAY.
$— Leave for Horthwe»,.J Wla Mail and Bs....... «'M «V.m lorntor PwMMtttir ^4 :nr n» (Ai rive from Northwest.J '»»rU Mall ami Bx 0:# ilMJiatiapolii* Faaaettger I MOp Jg H. A SOrTIIRASTERS, (to WorthlituUin.i
JDepot, Main and Klrat Bta.J (Leave for Houtbeart,]
.lerAmmodaiton 7 (Arrive from ttoutbeaxt.) (CcoiamoUUon 8:09
WHS
DANVILLE BOITTE.
Cbup & Eastern Qiaoii Mroid.
MOUTH.
7.86 a.m. 10.S0 p.m .10.10 l.»»a.m Jl.» 3.44
T«^rr* flame. UanvlUe w2Xti"°..: (gia •. "•'W.
I 7.40-.*1. hiS^.m titeatfo..•Tf.t- 4.(0* ~r~" mfawak&i. §fi liui
:.ifl.oo bigtu-Jic.
p?m. fl.
»t^r
..'V
4.D0*.«i HO
nv«. D*i«vUI« «. Mhv*)pe#tofl*
..latOa-m ..10.10
k.
.y-.p '•uM
olaer
9.35 p.k. 8J»
X"'A
I*
3,110 sua 7.W
458 '$ .4»»'iV H.OO
!.fl0 8,0ft
8.1R
13.
«nternt» Ut •. )M»J p.m I Ar O. Mlnff*. 9.9U I.ITi «.»iven rrrufllMjr *. ImM
tWNMIM!* wka»c«
Um*
Af. VHWanWh.'ns Am 13.4% 1»*W Ar. Ur*i'n 8#y VM
... ».aop.» (MM"
Milwaukee 4].^ Aftn BtjrO 40 H*caiuibA^ 1 (UW u.
0
l.lne.
Cbk-«K». W.U a.m 1 AT. St. PmI ...tWikwi iW. II. KTBNMKKT,
W **»»«•*€«.
llilffttbit
H£.ChlcafO
Si. Pul
Wfiy.
Ar. Mllwanfcee 1S.36 p.m QfOIKHB'C. 3.4R L«Crw**«., HUO 8», hittl 4.00 a-»
.10.10
,1010 ••d 9,00 p.m
Mtl*anke« 11.34 p.m Ocowmi t. l.^Sa.m
a.nn
7M
««, Paul l.»p-TO V. H. CAKPK^TBR.
Oen. hM. «d Tfct. Ac'!, Milwaukee
EHVOUSJJEBILITtl «IHAY*M WPECirir HBBIWWB. IAOC HMfcft, omUn-T1**. |li«k B«a*fty. 111
lAn6»fks^tain-
«w fw &} Weakoea*, ^pvrmaiiarrkea.
iMMtm iwi alt btwett+eMiir fottow aa lUwaee of mtee: as
In whtck matlpv-lewone. V| l%«iQrt»*« at »l
or si* packa*ee Kw II, or will be |y mail od r*elpl ®f Ike aist VRR iiBAT MIOIIt^K
Sefthaake' flmwxv, M*** la Tern HaaU aa* Iqr a« Pw«Ma every. ".!!!!.. *.J.1.LU. '~JUi -J. S1111 .* CXJAL OFFICE. 8, Wht*t t« ttN'puredl to furnbh all iihIm of coal im wood—'^pta «w l)» b«»etiit(dat« wlmi,,
fT.pbasbd
iKM^^ he wm&dm ra hi* W. Jumu it from any pain «*f thedty, *»d iwrtw «wme anHitioe aa If left at lfc«' oak*, tanking tk» public for paai nairtB«*e. gwaranUMM to be aa prronpt io *uppvthem with |bebe»l of cotl in the fa
1
4. rs-
V-
^jh.PCVIMU*AISI
4
imUUKV, i.
-t OKiQilitttc Raalt B««*
PAYINO TOLL.
The MlKfefKaaetMu-, U»# auura were hdglitr" Tb^m*ow»«»MMH»Aill and Iklr, "Tm Iwt wtad i» hraciny eotd,
kertJ and omincwae «lr,
X»A
Sablr
Half kiddn 'neatb ilt« farry nbw, W#MiWcaaglr*«ebyaWe. What cared we
tar Uti
biting eoM •.
Mjr tee audi were
«if
0«
ria*.
ut
Omt
spfW,
wM ewlit oar ru»i)»r» smo^Hk,
WepUed tie whip via k, am A*4«mg left the t#ni|«Wod. Our aidgk bella rlactnc |m' -o peal. IbfRsnaioeftbeaBverbe!)#
Ka»r oat lltwwi »a«i mrtulccUima, With which nr Suit's ha*j» vok* And mmj lat«ti kept tnae wd lint*! tee held the wfcfp aod I the reiae' 1 louad my left arm
I held the rrtna exceedloc U«bt
2:30pm
,.V. .,..4"
0TU-«ASCAJ9TLOASUD4EN»TAI#, I
"fkrtoO ?, To whom—and why—and bow There's no one here to pay it to What do yon mean yoo horrtd thing
SWd ft*at wait a mowrai, Sue, ovet yonrf^aitneatbemau." I *IH tornwl to look, and theo
stols,
1
*«*«piiek tUon*ht, a hearty kiss.
a if a to a ii pa id to
t:l»pm
i.
my ears, bat what of that?
f«*e a'klm tor every bl«w. I. Hl *he wae flart to k«*p quit*still, XVfwti underneath ihehul|alo: ,*iid every Midge we -piuaw^ thal night
Khp'd reacb ap from h^r fiele, f:«r ht^r rtpe r«l to'i? 111^.
»ay
"Qbiu, BOM—MOW
AOD
Whfirfb«in'hisofficeMtehd-
Of tTiofle BoVhiiy seats,
Wwiftfd with mootlbfne «tid1\-^. 'After imjoienadtn^hfough the part, viftiung the wait, thi o«rtr^^^t%'hahy Hons #tid the muwflllli the n^tlftiental huaIMiul Tetnrned horned 'J ^Ah.dufky, wliete have yon V»een^the wift^ at ahe kiwwsd htm aa tushal "Oh, dqv^n tp the office the same old ilrudgt'ry. Oh, pet I'm ao glad jto get
t.
bat klo my little wifey." "Did you take tlie stage to the door, sweetfraaked the wife tenderly. "Yes, lovey and 1 was too tired to walk home. Why 1 never went out to lunch 1 waa so busy." "Just sat and wrote al! day, darling did youT! "Yea, daw, all day lon^r. Qh I mat ^Lttt me see your pocket'boox, com tinned the wifr "T want io thing ifi it" n»en s«1e outlhe little pedometer. ..
t4Oh,EdasitiT'
*.u?S!W to laeaaity or
XW imw ikat 8SIMI-.
"But, Caroliue ^PonHbut me, Edward
If" t,",'"v"rt0
"H1!
out ut urn
-Vi««* dtfl pat It Caa't foe i«h1 Why, reuod her pliant* waJM, you fooa We *kreWi*-apraa at*^$fetoa*t^
1"
Wttk MMt k|y«M«aHtMi la rigfat,' Aad haipf a« the happiest arc. Oar «ieicbia( oa a winter ni*htWeoaae upoe anMfcMd*«,
'"•J -tbd flee IrjttkMl up pale With aflMgbt. "What Utli«- niatterT" wbtopered ahe •What a*kf*yae laogb and look aodnllf
Vo« chat^Htur Utile duix*,"
mM I,
**We'i% mly atopped
1:88*
Mull Train !0«»a £a#h«t8z .......v..pat
pay tke toll"
to
r*r tsi toll..'"
OfTB HIM A LIFtp I
tfw MB! a Bit: don't kneel fat p»yee Hor *»raib^- with hia dnpalr: TBe man 1* down, and hi* gra»t need I* reXHy help, not prayer and
'(Is Utne when the wouuds are washed mgfust u»e Inward motive be reteaM n»»t ww, wbaie'erth+epfrlt be, *%"". Here words are but mockery. ij 1. as
&\*
Oktegnaln of aid just now Is more fo him than tomss of saintly lore Pray. If yon must In yonr heart. Bot glre bltn a lift, g)re him a start The world Is ttill of good advios, Of prayer, and praise, and preacblav niee— But the gMieroun souls who aid mankind Art soaroe as gold and hard to find. (Mve like a Christian —speak In deedsA noble lilt's the best of creeds ,, And he shall wear a royal emm Wbe gfvw tbem a lift when th ar« dowa!
..'M
.The Pedometer. I
bite of tihe most curious little iiistrumenta the pedometer, a small mwhinr about the size of a watch, which yor carry in your pocket to denote the dip tance you travel on foot or rid© 01 horaebttrk. It is a very accurate machine. A friend of mine put one
hi*
}n
pocket the other day, and walked from the Fifth avenue hotel to the Central park and back. Strange to aoy, i' marked the distance aa accurately as jBuryeyef .tould menfinre it. The little hft workft .tJiis whJ1 It tells the pa*you take, or that Voui trring any given time. To tn^ie mfeps you take an a ^®*lktw© lumd red ^)f' step ^itTff Wrirn%tmye|el
the taak. Muny simahir j»lalfonns exiM all along the Nik? in lower Eg*pf. There {a abroad expanse of black aihtviai foil, dotted with occasional palms, and green here and there with corn or clover.
yond
Monsieur 1L
by
ihtflfttflfrprcit »te|i,ilwJwiwiU Iwvt lli^ngth of your average Bteg. Then «t tlie jwflAiHetgr, ind Btwrf. I $ Th^ 'oil" "'mOpung a young married Indv, Mi.^—, whd had Wispidons that her Jin? lmlul
entest, distrusses, in
larkiha^ it foo rnOch
wiion heoUjf!itii tq ingTo 1iWrfifeiiift' P^j^fflger to hih ^^(^l^»k. vKi»in| Wfwl- good by, ilie iniiocent husband sauntered oat and t«fu^lpi«fei£e for his down-town .office, fltr TtflT hp^WPrV.dushing #idow, 1whoH#5fci# Itf C«*fmi»J81'k ft) BW the ftlliMlft, t^tathe^to^nf on a flirt-(4)
to Mkt aom* took
alie screjoiHHi, aa ahe
hetd It tig. {m "Whatf Caroline! •'Why, here, you've traveled elet«tt Initea wnc« morning. Wherahave you I been How could you? Oh, ymi ylok* |*d,1md man. to deceive your ifife so
V*
ot»*re been
I
wtlkiflg around all d«y, Yon^ftouidn havelrtlen near th« office atmi.'^h.voa
ym atiofl#r dav Now, who waa, aluL Who waa tiw lady T* Caroline, 1 met Mra» Swope, titairs wife, and——w **Xo ydu dfdnt: she's bwsn with mt alldsy? Oh, Edwanl and U»aa ahe burst into teara. \i :i S ..
That night that ^oor, l#eatt brok«i httsband awof« hy «fi th« domet«* he«v«n or eartii that he'd rmirji* li lib wife «cr»in. He tstm took «%ewir chuirti i»e*t to bli #HwWM»*aa and every So»d*y we mn now mt hio with a pedometer in hia pocket nttaaa* tng hia «»v to chuibb»
I"
1
"in1"11.........-!,.-" .. "Kg"1 are Tea m* «l» rrthtwt
Asked a brlsiith^akiiig maa 1W mt«er*l»lc. I'm billions and can't eat, and W& hack la^oMme I eaxtH wodtl" 'jfky ii tip wo^|iMs*t you fake Kl^aty oft tbi'ti what I take wlien I am o«t of and li alwavH keeps me In perfect tune* My doctor n»^iouneKd« It for »H mdtt troubles." KWIaey Wort fc« thesarecaonrfor biUltmsiiHM and etHMtktfCfbii* llwrt fitiltstrr iu—bmf Arrow* ,Y«km,
Prof. Otii)s»ttt»e** IVnck KkJney Pad cures by all 4ife»»ia. of the kidneys andariaary orgaaa. Try it.
HK.NI.MH. sWTM^HBUSIGKE,
Eel* out of the, natuml rex'k. 3 jjv
Be
the reach of tlxe inundation rises a wall of stone, thirty, foHy, perhaps fifty feet above the lower level. Tlie top ia flat and covered with l«*»e santl, which blows over on the fields below at every storm. 'Behind ia yet another ridge of higher -frocks, and a third step may be still further. On the intermediate level the pyramids are placed. Bnt if we follow the*track of the first Pharoolt who came up from Memphis to find a auitable place for. hla louik. threading his wav by the side of the Kile, through the network of canals, toward a hollow io the long line of low cliffs, the first object which would meet hi$ eye, standing up by itself out of the sand-drift, halfway on the slope between the lower and tlie higher platforms, would lie a great mBK* or column of rock aixty or seventy feet in he«li backed bv a low ridae ronning out a couple of hundred feet toward the face of the hill. Such isolated rocks are common in Egypt, One of them Bt&nds to the pyramid of Bashog^ ittrt «a the sphinx stands to the pyramid of Cbephren. A similar rock probably forms the core of the mysterious tomb of Sueforoo, »t Maydoon. The rock may have already jipmaretl to Ixmr the semblance of a human face, 1'iit it conld not be overlooked. The first, ravs of the morninw «„n would strike it, and the sphinx, it is all but ccrtain, must hive been roughhewn Toy the earliest occupiers of ii.tuha of tlie ancient empire. It more than once been suggested that tw*. sphinxes sat by the pyramids, like the two Memnons'in the plain of Thebes, and that only one remains. But it is improlntblc that two rocks to be carved were on the same slope. If a second sphinx ever existed, he may hnv4 been wholly built up, a (Srcurnstati^fj which would help to account for his tHal disappearance. In Charlotte Bronte's preface to her sister's novel, "Wutherin^ Heights." she speaks of her creatibn of the chHractej- of l|eathfield in word.^ which with slight" change, describe the maker of the sphinx. His work was "hewn in a wild workshop, with simple ols out of simple materia
some ami
IK"
TKRRE HAUTK.
He fomid
die block of samlstone in ilie solitary •lesert, and, "gusting thereon he sat how from the crag might be elicited a head, wivage, swart, sinister form molded with at must one element of grandeurpower. lie wrought with a rough chisel and from no model but tli^ vision of his meditations. With time and labor the crag took human shape, and there it stands, colossal, dark, and frowning, half statue, half rock in the former sense, terrible and aotolin-like in the latter, almost beautiful." But the concluding lines of Currer Bell's wonderful picture do not apply to the sphinx though its coloring Itti'of mellow ixay," no moorland moss clomes It- no "Jieath wltlf blooraihg belli and l»lmy fi-aj^rance grows faithfully close to the giant'f foot an Arab situ astride on the ear and offers to chop a targe niece out
at
the eyeball for yon for half, a /canc, or a smidl piece for a plnstre
The Earth. P. Malet, a French scl-
the
Land and Water,
perplexing question of the earth's age ana origin, lie rejects the Plutonic and Neptunian theories aa "controversial and deceptive emanations from false and unnatural data," and evolves a theory of hi! own, which he expresses in the fol lowing series of postulates: (1) There Was a vapor mass floating and gravitating in space. (2) This mass held in it the bate of present elements. (3) As tlx elements are susceptible of light now. so were their bases in the beginning.
The light of heaven fell upon tins vapor mass. (5) The vapor mass wa* susceptible of Ught. (6) The action of floatation was converted into rotation on its axis. (7) The action of gravitation was ft-oa vert od into revolution abound thiiifuier dC^ttractiom. [TheSe let ion
ikltractidnl ar« dempnstmted by the radiometer, and under thew actibus the entire mass became subject to the jpteul law of attraction.] (8) The entire snrfoce of the miss Sune slowly unddr tlie influence of the light. (9) Under this infioebce the Dgltteft gaSM 6f 'Hhi bnass were attrairtea from the surffcoe""t£ the light. (10) The gases which rose highest became atr and lbrmed the atmospheric envelope. (10) The gases which became condensed into liquid formed the prater envelope or ocean. (12) The residas of the vapor mass became solid mole4ules| &nd, gravitating to their own center, gradually consolidating into the solid of this earth, the silicious rockt.
pt
Mala contends that these postotlates were demonstrated to the liquefaction and solidification of M. Caiiletet anki M. Raoul Petet, and that they are Inevitable results of the effect of light on the Vapor mass, the great womb of time. "This light," he savs, "fell in its wavy streams rapor and reduced it irmony and to leva rhere are no phenomena on earth tkM io not follow on their natural course from this beainniwe."
SheMy Aatof Aristocracy. It iet v«?y ast{mi^iinf h(W mauiy rich peowe t»tideecend to wear imitations of costly thhu^ kml this piece of bad taste ir not bv thy means confined to nouv1mux riAitt^ who might be exbected to knbir better.^ Cotton v^veH with a silk face-does duty for tke rich Lytwis velret, whidb once alone did duty for the rich gentlewomen imitation lace,tnOdk jew* elryand sham
tan
are worn unblushing-
ly. If, as Soften slated, ladies iliss to pleant the ropjoeite s^l hot to ei* the envy of their own, tlie wearing «l shams most fiiil of its effect. Another *x nuy be very covetous of her ii* $ai*s diamonds, ad^es and old point bof ahe «ould only feel contfecQptoms toward IkfMle, thedyed rabbitwkHiewwd ma-chine-made lace tbt.do duty not readily takfn in hy wUtnto recognises feather, andmosttoen stand good lace and tween paste and greater snobbery than proteoMon rf aaodem mm m«rs easllj m*n
Air
sham finery. trot «fll o»ly wear what nfils kfnd. no wtm tk*t kiad BMtji be.
ot
4.^41 ve -^V
fJ. £L J-*.'
CAMTKfcAND BUILDER. iJaaiuifarlitrer of Drr «!ticke** v-~ ^atoiitHofrJiceriitors,
HAXLEL S. KAHLY,
Pork, Lartl Bacon,
1
Ctti. tath and SyeattMW* 8t*.» TKRIUC UAUTE IND.
rt
Sugar C«ml Hams.
18 MAIN STREET. y."T-"w L, KtlSSNEK,
:v.
213 OHIO STREET.
-:u.INDIASf*1
Oldest mnelc house in Western IpdlAiia. Always the largest utock om hahu kept in tli eity. Ptsnoe ami o?gaa* retted io the »at wil pay for tbeut. I
CHAS.,:
aa^xj,"'r.
Comer Third and Moffatt kiulkii I*,htW*! ALL K1MS OF
st»:,
•-•••li--•'•5-tt: FAMILY GROCERIES. oStnL ». j»-
r,*5
-.floUi
THE ZL.EAD.
Always was, and always will be E. L. PROBST,
v|-£ S if
Kounh etreet. bet. Msiu and Ohio
SPECIAL' ANNOUNCEMENT i.
&
TO THE PI1 BMC.
Usvlti^ jn«it retnmed from the Iw'ern taarketa, where I Uave par chased one ef the woet Completestocksof
,-m
UHTTiir
everplaccd on Uwrs ehctve# clothie Of the
of my late pnrchaee*, my Jow prlcee are
BIG FEATURE.
vV,W«tf $4i»*v{r
1
Ia my Uvrefeant IkiWiag Dcpartmeat I better qtuillfal ihan ever to, demand*
,^wTr'|krt^tar.meet
,,%$
tiff w* Ph MI-
tO&i
I,
iu»
v..
ivjv'
4jt
hxer*t?f S"-'1*
actea. Vnhtmss Land 1 work bsla* eompietad
October
-f of a Terre Hatita
I mgs t^re»|w4fa1 Jy vlte the Attention
2
am"
P^TWP^HILQSS,
^420 MilH itiee
wmm
TVfmA SXTRrS,
mg:
kHa'-a&'A
mniiiir «p^paii»»ng -.. *'i*'
6^3
-r-M- mrrc^wrMyT'
•M
Km. II •ereet every purpoae whereiaTjx" ta
MmfKMkfTK M.
rmtbi
DYSPEPSIA.
W. S. OLIFT. J. H. WILLIAMS J. M. CLIFT
SASHES -DOORS, BLINDS,
AND DEALERS IN
Lumber, Lath, Shingles, Glass, Paints, Oils and Builders' ...^Hardware.
f*" %i!
«r»f« tut ,UM ft
HV
Library of
iversal -Knowledge
In tfiae bteome pnrchassrs of t&e CneyekmMdla «U1 males to do. thoocb most of tbem for th«ir n»wsp»p*s an Maus of the iaterary Bevotutton, who taow wal w». Ai and does what It promisss to do, will printed oopua of the largest ommes will be shipped ss ma] ate Issqsd, or may be dtrsolsd, as
Chambers's Encyclopaedia
Aa a portion of Iks library of ttatvenel Knowledge, ws 1*™« Chambece's vohtmes Sa*. In tms style Is^j $7.00 KTsa dnrtnime during MMvohuneUwlll moattof BosiS, gut topk
Priee, A
S'BnsdiCfbt ready aboot
'osx&^zsr&'jszsstv.s.
AmericanAdditions:
win aiso
psr volume in etoth, I aad other ro
soomr. Price for the m. Ike foor volumes Joh&aoa**
Standard Books
tt vota^iXSeOO. Bmv«UMAK 4
v^Mwb.
et meabe«e bososd te oMk. staapbtsJHigsaH Sa# be ssat S
ewtams
•OWI, MAftf&Mti,
RMMTMW
StSSe stsiaaa,'
AMERICAN BOOK EXCHANGE, JO&M B. ALDEN, Kakaobk. Tribune BaUdlng^ Hew iwtr
1 "L OODECKE. Sole Agent tor Terre Haute.
BLOOD.
11
necessary.
MEMCfflE CO., lb. 213 Stmt, St Li*.
/mrn/c.
a.
^rfrj
hits Ym-nwir,
'jk
CORNER OP NINTH AND MULBERRY STREETS. TERRE HAUTE, IND.
SHOP
A I E S 0 A N O N ICanufactmer of
1
rt', =?c Portable and Statiouai'y Engine*, Flour, SH wJH.il 1 ai|}l Jt-i MINING MACHINERY. HANOKR8, PULLEYS, SHAFTING, ... UPRIGHT AND HORIZONTAL STEAM K:
602 N. Sixth Street, Terre Haute, Indiana!
j'f^dondksMd tbSa^ft oost Is but a fraettea of Ibrtr two^»
,*1 osnta. tt has bean wflostom taprsvlottsj
jtooffsr special induesmeats to those
eslved.
IKMS orasn ars soooast rs
W
In pormanos of that poUoy, ar Wn flsity It «eip, wa will rtoelre work I
l^ftSil
vV'*"
,r|^ETC.
.wiiaeM
wblek are mads by fbe
•s»top»
WSfgtLm.
m8",-
IV
rJ
I few
*W
S
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