Pike County Democrat, Volume 26, Number 26, Petersburg, Pike County, 8 November 1895 — Page 7

PROTECTIONIST THREATS. Vow Th«y Would Deprive Oar Wootoi Manafaetarer* •( Cheep Wool Md W«rk•r* of littort WH(M. The republican programme a* defined at the convention in Springfield, O.. clearly indicates a purpose to ret store the duties on wool should the party be brought into power in 1896. To soothe the woolen manufacturers while thus threatening them in the midst of a revival of prosperity they are promised a restoration of the McKinley duties in woolen fabrics. At the same Uipe they are told in face of the ofHcialyreturns of trade that the new tariff is flooding the Amerioan market with foreign woolens. How false is this assertion is seen by a comparison of yearly imports. In 1892, the first full fiscal year under the McKinley tariff, the visible imports of woolen fabrics amounted in value to $35,565,879; in *898, to $38,048,515; in 1894, to $19,439,372, and in 1895, to $36,542,396. It is thus seen that in the first year of* the new tariff the imports of woolens are not as great as in the first year of McKinleyism. Under the McKinley tariff American consumers paid an average of nearly 100 per cent duty at the custom house on their woolen clothing, and a corresponding tax on the consumption of domestic products. Under the new tariff the average duty on woolen imports is 50 per cent It is the mere fanaticism of protection to imagine that the American people will ever consent tb a restoration of the barbarous McKinley duties on their

woolen clothing1. Whilst the visible imports of woolens under the McKinley tariff were nearly as great as they are now large quantities of these goods were introduced by the smugglers tempted by large profits from evasion of the.exorbitant rates of duty. So great was the demoralization caused by this contraband traffic that the woolen manufacturers employed agents to assist the custom house officials to detect the frauds in their trade. Under the new tariff the temptation and opportunity for these frauds on the woolen manufacturers are greatly reduced. For the first time in the industrial history of the United States the Amer"ican woolen manufacturers are on equal footiug with their European rivals. As proof of the promptness with which they have seized the occasion offered them the total imports of raw wool last year amounted to 206,133,806 pounds, of which 101,326,243 pounds were free. These figures alone afford an eloquent refutation of the calamity howling pretenses that the American woolen manufactures are suffering under the new tariff. But in order to estimate the full sig

mficance of the above returns of trade a further analysis of them is necessary. Under the McKinley tariff the bulk of the imports of raw wool consisted of the low grades for making carpets. Under the policy of free wool the tables are already completely turned. The imports of free wool of the first and second class for clothing exceeded in quantity the imports of carpet wool last year. While the value of imports of clothing wool was $15,277,777 the value of imports of free carpet wool amounted to $3,718,447 in value. These figures tell the story of free wool in the first year of its operation. The importations of foreign wool are much the greatest ever thade, both in quantity and quality. When given a free choice, the enterprising American manufacturers have promptly met European competitors on their, own aground. Instead of confining themselves as formerly to the common grades of wool, they are importing and using in their looms the finest fleeces of Australia and Argentina. But let. the republican threat of disturbing the industrial peace by restoration of the wool duties be carried out, and it will be followed by a disastrous reaction against the woolen manufactures. Importations of wool will be arrested; wages will be reduced, strikes will ensue, factories will bo closed, large investments of capital will be lost, and the end will be widespread distress and demoralization in the trade. Intelligent manufacturers and workingmen in the woolen industries can hardly fail to recognize that their interests are closely bound up with the maintenance of the policy of free wool.— Philadelphia Press. BUSINESS PROSPERITY. Good Crop* On* Cana*, the Wilson Bill A aThe republican governor of Kansas, Mr. E. N. Morrill, telegraphed the World that there is “a genuine revival of business in Kansas,” but that it is “due to large crops rather than to the Wilson bill.” The World has never claimed that the Wilson bill is the sole cause of the increase in business this year as compared with conditions existing under the McKinley bill. It is quite true that the abundant crops of the west and south are an important factor in promoting the confidence which is the first essential of a business revival. It is not the less true, however, on this account, that the Wilson bill is to be judged by/hegeneral results which follow its passage. And in the first year of its passage, as the World showed recently in an exhaustive analysis, wages have begun to advance, the price of important articles of raw material has, become cheaper to manufacturers, with significant reductions in the price of finished products and with a resumption of business in numerous mills and factories which suspended operations under the McKinley

bill. The three leading industries of the country are the manufacture of woolens, cottons and iron. The revival has been marked in all three of them and it has been accompanied by an increase of wages. On May 20 last the great Homestead works gave a voluntary increase of 10 per cent, in wages, which was soon followed by increases affecting the wages of 7,000 Chicago iron workers, 7,000 at Joliet, 1,000 at Lebanon, fc*a., and 4,000 at Scranton, with like increases in the wages of Ohio and Alabama iron workers. In woolens and Cottons increases were reported from Fall River. Law

Insm Kow Badford, Olney* III© sad ' other mills which had experienced • diminution of activity under the Mei Kioley bill. And it is a noteworthy ! fact that these increases in the wares | of labor was frequently followed uv a | diminished pries to the consumer. | It has been shown that the reductioo in the''price of cotton (roods amounts to aboutr 14 per cent. It is not the purpose of this article to deal with -such | reductions as those in canned goods. : tea, coffee, rice and similar article* j We wish rather to emphasize the fact that the decrease in the price of raw materials illustrated by the 33 t«r cent, reductidh in the most necessary grades of wool, has materially quick* ened enterprise In those industries and has given opportunity for higher wages and lower prices. This may appear a paradox to extreme protectionists, but, no matter how their theories may blind them to the fact, it is a fact that whatever tends to induce the largest possible production and distribution of manufactured goods tends to lower prices to consumers, to increase profits to manufacturers and to give labor higher wages. The most important clauses of the Wilson law are framed on this theory, and the evidence in hand shows that results are justifying it — N. Y. World.

AN "INDUSTRIAL CENSUS." In Whlefcr It Is Shown That Klcnrea Do Kot Toll the Troth When JhbcImI with. The American Economist has gone back to its old trick of manufacturing' statistics to suit the protection humbug and publishes several columns of figures which it claims as a fair state* ment; of the number of men employed, and wages paid, under the McKinley and the Wilson tariffs. Long strings of doctored figures may impose on a few people who believe" anything which looks statistical, but the Economist’s frauds in this line on former occasions make unnecessary a detailed exposure of its present fake census. Claiming to have received returns from 456 employers of labor the Economist states that the replies show the number of men now employed to be 3 per cent, less than in 1393, and that the rate of wages paid in the principal industries is i? per cent, less than in 1892. One sample will show the nature of the statistics which have been widely copied by the protectionist organs, as an evidence that wages were higher and work more abundant under Me* Kinleyisra than at the present time. The returns for the great farming industry, employing millions of men, give the number of men employed as 16 in 1&92, 13 in 1694 and 13 in 1395. And it is from such returns that the Economist figures out that there has been a decline in the number of men

employed. Another glowing example of fraud is given under the heading “General La* borers,” the number of whom is given as 75 in 1892, and only 20 in 1895. If the Economist’s returns were genuine, and not made in its own office, they \eoura show that the number of labor* ers now at work is much larger than in the year when the great Carnegie strike against a reduction of wages failed because of the thousands of idle men ready tp take the strikers' placed. The statements in regard to wages are also pure inventions of the Pro* tective league organ. The mere fact that its alleged returns from manufacturers show wages in th« woolen and cotton goods industry -e 50 per cent lower than in 1898 is uuough to stamp the whole of its figures as barefaced falsehoods. High tariff lying is common enough, and the Economist ia easily the chief offender, but when it next prepares a batch of home-made statistics it should be careful not to make such glaring blunders as cutting down wages one-half, in an industry in which practically all the mills have increased wages during the past year. __B. W. H. Free Woo). The wool market is keeping pace with the cotton and iron markets in activity. • The sales for one week recently at the leading wool centers of the United States aggregated nearly 15,000,000 pounds. Boston is the principal market of the country and that city did the largest business in wool that week in its entire history. The buyers are manufacturers. Their mills are all running and they need more wool. They are buying, too, for the future. The demand for woolen goods is growing. The price of wool has advanced and manufacturers are thoroughly convinced that it is not going to decline for some time. In Boston alone about 20,000,000 pounds of wool have been taken by them within the last °two weeks. Opponents of the Wilson tariff bill said that the wool business in the United States would be ruined if wool were placed on the free list. It has been there a year and the result has been increased trade for growers and manufacturers and a corresponding improvement in the trade in woolen goods —St Louis Republic. ' Ou the Lookout “Your oorn crop is good this year?** said Farmer Corntossel’s city relative. “Fine.” “And the tobacco crop is good?” “First rate.” “You ought to be happy, but you don’t look so.” “Well, betwix’ you an’ me, I am kinder incouraged, but I’m tryin’ not ter let on too soon. Pm jes’ lookin’ every day fur one o’ these here calamity politicians ter come along an’ convince me that good crops is li’ble ter be the wust thing thet kin happen fer the farmer *f we don’t vote his way.** — Washington Star.

They Occasionally Tall the Truth. “The consumption of tin plate in the United States was never so large as at the present time.*’ So says the high* tariff New York Press. “The iron trade is exceedingly active and coke workers know that the demand for their product is enormous.” This ia the assertion of the New York Tribune. In Bpite of themselves these calamity waiters are compelled to admit that industry is prospering and that business has vastly Improved under the Wilsea tariff. &

AGRICULTURAL HINTS. WARM AND COMFORTABLE. Diagram and rmptelln View of a Winter Poultry Haase. Now is the time to get in readiness for the poultry house that will keep fowls warm when the mercury is ranging below zero, and the price of eggs ranging from forty to fifty degtwes above zero. It won't do to wait before thinking about that house. If a new one is to be built, it ia worth while to plan very carefully to secure both ecoa

▼ WARM WINTER POULTRY HOUSE. oroy and wannth. An expensive poultry* house is a great piece of folly, but a carefully built one is money in the end. Whether poultry pays depends largely on whether the fowls lay well in the winter. To secure winter laying, a warm house ia absolutely necessary, together with good management as to feeding, exercise, etc. The accompanying diagram shows a section through a winter poultry house, where fowls will be comfortable on the coldest days. A dry spot of ground is chosen und a foundation of rough stone laid below its level. A rough stone wall is then, laid for two and a half or three feet above this and banked to the top ou the other side with earth.

CUOSS SECTION. It to the top on the outside with earth, get a go°d sod all about the house to prevent washing. The floor inside is cemented, the cement being carried up onto the wall rocks. If the woodwork above such a wall is covered with heavy sheat hing paper, both on roof and walls, and then shingled, one may bid defiance to outside cold. The windows should be only in the higher wall, facing the south, or better, the southeast, for in this position the fowlsgetthesunquicker in the morning. The door should enter above the wall of stone, with steps down on the inside. If the door goes to the bottom, as in an ordinary house, the floor will not be as warm, as more or less air will come in about a door, make it as tight as one can. A perspective view of the house complete is also given herewith.—Webb Donnell, in N. Y. Tribune.

SHIPPING POULTRY. The Kind of Coops Needed to Insure tat* Is rectory Results. Country shippers ought to pay more attention to the condition of their coops before using.. Considerable stock is j lost by shipping in worn-out coops, which come apart in transit4f roughly handled, as sometimes happens. Every coop should be carefully examined, and all bottoms and cleats securely nailed. The coops should be strong, but light; heavy wood is unnecessary if long nails are used. They should not be so large as to render handling difficult. The coops should be high enough to allow the j>oultry to stand easily upright, and should not be overcrowded. Too dose packing aDd too low coops are cruel and cause loss by suffocation. Hens and roosters should be shipped ! separately whenever possible. All | poultry for the New York market should be well fattened, and should be fed lightly before being placed in the coop, if it reach its destination the day after shipping, ns the Ne\v York law* requires that the crop be entirely empty before J killing. From more distant points pro- | vision must be made for feeding and watering in transit. At the beginning of their journey they should be fed lightly, as overfeeding at such time makes the birds sick and dumpish and unfit for the fatigues of travel. After ! the first day or two, when the poultry have become accustomed to their new quarters, the supply of food should be increased. All these things should be considered and every care exercised to have the birds arrive in the best possible condition, so that they may sell readily at the highest prices. It is only good stock that really pays. The shipper who does not get the best market price for his stock should consider seriously where the fault really lies.—N. Y. World.

AMONG THE POULTRY. Poultry like apples and they are good for them. The value of a pullet as a layer is uncertain until she has been tried. Thousands of chicks die because they are permitted to become chilled. They are very tender things. The house and fence about a poultry yard should be substantia], if not ornamental. Build both to 6tay. Almost anybody can devote a portion of their time to the poultry business. The farmer should do it by all means. ” One trouble experienced by beginners with incubators is that they have never given their poultry any attention and they practice this sort of negligence with the incubator. Most people who sell eggs as a business, for setting, try to have them good. They must do that if they expect to continue in business. As a rule, therefore, when eggs fail to hatch, we should carefully investigate the conditions tfefore blaming the man from whom we purchased them.—Fanners’ Voice. t

A Ian Woman. Jinks—1 never »w a honse where everything ran so smoothly as at Broadgrin's. Minks—Yes; lucky fellow. Broad* grin. He’s got a wife who knows how to keep the servants amused while she does the work.—N. Y. Weekly. —“I wonder what makes those bat* tons burst off so?” Dora petulantly exclaimed. David looked at her tightfitting dress. “Force of habit, probably,” he said, after a thoughtful pause. —Rockland Tribune. HARDENING OF THE LIVER. Bow a Pittsfield, HL, Gentleman Overoame It. Condition Often Induces Paralysis and Should Bare the Best of Treatment.

From the Democrat, Pittsfield, HI Mr. Valentino Smith, a farmer living in this county, whose post office address is Pittsfield, 111., for the good of humanity in general, and especially for the benefit of any who may lie afflicted as he was, wishes to make the following statement with reference to the great benefit he has received from using Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People: His statement is as follows: “About a year ago 1 was living in tho Mississippi bottom near tho river, and I hod become very much broken in health, suffering greatly from a distension or hardening of the lower part of the abdomen or bowels, besides being troubled with my kidneys and other complications which rendered my case, as 1 had supposed, almost hopeless. I had been in this condition, although, of course, not as bad as 1 was a year ago, for something over six years, and had about given up all hope of ever being a well man again, when, by the many testimonials and advertisements I had read with reference to the wonderful cures perfected by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People I was induced to give them a trial. After taking two boxes I began to feel greatly relieved, and by the time 1 had used up five or six boxes I was completely cured and have been, comparatively speaking, a well man ever since. During all the time that I was suffering with this dreadful disease, which I I am unablo to name, I passed many sleepless nights and was in great distress almost continually and was able to do but little work. Now I sleep and eat well, and although I am sixty-one years of age, I am able to do a good day’s work on the farm, having put in and tended eight acres of corn this season, besides doing a large amount of other work on the farm. In short, I think y our medicino a great blessing to humanity, and can cheerfully recommend it to all suffering as I was. 1 had been in this condition six or seven years and had given everytiiing I could hear of, doctors included, a fair trial, but could get no relief. Valentine Smith. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 4th day of Juno A. D., 1 S'.to. Minnie CoCet, Xotary Public. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills contain, in a condensed form, all the elements necessary to give new life aud richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are an unfailing specific for such diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vitus' dance, sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous headache, the after effect of la grippe, palpitation of the heart, pale and sallow complexions, all forms of weakness either in male or female. Pink Puls are sold by all dealers, or will lie sent post paid on receipt of price 80 cents a box, or six boxes for •2.80, by addressing Dr. Williams' Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. T.

THE MARKET*. New York, November 4,1895 CATTLE—Native Steers. 4 3 59 @14 75 COTTON—Middling. © . » FLOOR—Winter Wheat.. 3 50 © 4 45 WHEAT—No. 2 Red. © m CORN—No. 2.. © 37 OATS—No. 8.. . .... © 84 PORK—Net* Mess.... © 9 75 J sr. l uns. COTTON-MtddUng... HE E VES—Fancy Steers. 4 90 Medium. .... 4 00 HOGS—Fair to Select.t 85 SH EEP—Fair to Choice. 8 16 FLOUR-Patents. 3 80 Fancy to Extfedo.. 8 75 WHEAT-No. 8 Red Winter. _ CORN—No. 8 Mixed. s»HO OAT'S— Na 2 . ‘ RYE—No. 8... 37 TOUACOO—Lugs.. 3 00 Leaf Burley....... 4 50 HAY—Clear Timothy. 9 50 U U ITER—Choice Dairy. 1« EGGS—Fresh .. 15 PORK—Standard Mess. BACON-Clear Rib . LAR1>—Prime Steam. CH4CAUU. CATTLE—Shi pput#. 3 50 © HOGS—Fair to Cholee.. 3 30 © SHEEP—Fair to Choice. 8 00 © FLOUR-Winter Patents..... 3 15 © Spring Patents.. 3 15© WHEAT—No 2 Spring. 5a*© No 8 Red. 59 © CORN—No. 8. 89J»© OATS—No. 8.. © PORK—Mess (new)... 8 M*« KANSAS Oil'Y CATTLE—ShippingSteers.... 8 75 © HOGS-All Grades._ 3 30 © WHEAT— No.8Red... © OATS—No. 8. 15 © DORN-Nu 8. 23*© NEW ORLEANS. FLOUR-HIgh Grade. 3 40 © CORN-Na 8. 38 © OATS—Western. . 84 © HAY-Choice.. 17 0t © PORK-New Mess . 8 75 © BACON-Sides. © COTTON—Miudllng... © LOUISVILLE WHEAT—No. 8 Red (new) ... 65*© CORN-Na 3 Mixed.. 38 © OATS—Na 8 Mixed. 80 © PORK—New Mess.. 8 68*© BACON-Clear Rib.6*© COTTON—Mddllng... ... .... .... ©

Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S, Gov't Repost Absolutely pure d

Ail Good m She Sent. A good story is going the rounds at the expense of a well-known society woman who doesn't lire a thousand miles from Rittenliouse square. The lady in question has just returned from a risit to friends in Washington, where she attended quite a number of functions. It is related that at a re1 ception she was presented to one of the attaches of the Russian legation. Feeling in a quizzical mood, she extended her hand to the Russian, at the same time exclaiming: “How do you doski?*' Not to tie outdone, the gentleman from the czar’s domains promptly and tersely replied: “BuHovitcli!” And the Philadelphia lady admitted that the laugh was on her.— Philadelphia Record, Ridgewat, Mo., Aug. 17,1895. Tnx Piso Compaxt, Warren, Pa. Gentlemen: Six years ago last Spring I took a severe, cold, which settled on my lungs. I coughed and spit blood until my husband was alarmed about me. I told him to go to the drug store and get me a bottle of Piso's Cure for Consumption. He did so, and by the time I had taken its contents according to directions I was very mm better. He then bought two more bottles, and they cured me. In fact, we could hardly keep house without Piso’s Cure for Consumption. Mv husband is subject to a cough every Winter, and he says nothing (and he has tned every cough medicine on the market) helps him as docs Piso's Cure. You may publish the above if you so deVery truly yours, Mas. Della Lott.

"Wish men will apply their remedies to ▼ices, not to names; to the causes of evil which are permanent, not the occasional organs by which .they act, and the transitory modes in which they appear.—Burke. When Wrinkles Seam the Brow, And the locks grow scant and silvery, infirmities of age come on apace. To retard and ameliorate these is one of the benign effects of Hosteller’s Stomach Bitters, a medicine to which the aged and infirm can resort as a safe solace and invigorant. It counteracts a tendency to rheumatism and neuralgia, improves digestion, rectifies biliousness and overcomes maiaria. A wineglass before retiring promotes slumber. “She has been thrice married? And all three husbands dead < She has had a terrible experience.” ‘'Yes, but then she has a brother who is an undertaker, and he always gives her a good deal off.”—Boston Transcript. The Skill and Knowledge Essential to the production of the most perfect and popular laxative remedy known, h’ave enabled'the California Fig Syrup Co. to achieve a great success in the reputation of its remedy, Svrup of Figs, as it is conceded to be the universal laxative. For sale by all druggists. The saddest things in life are mea without manhood, women without womanhood and children without childhood.—Young Men’s Era.

A corpus of jailbirds were drinking together when one of them took out bis watch. “Bless me!” exclaimed his astonished companion, "you’ve got a watch!” “Looks like it.*’ “And haw much did it cost youf*’ “Six months.’’—Washington Star. From Now Until Spring Overcoats and winter wraps will be in fa*b> ion. They can be discarded, temporarily, while traveling in the steam heated trains o(,the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Rail* way. For solid oomfort, for speed and foe safety, no other line can compare with tide great railway of the West Sorrow has not been given to ns for sorrow’s sake, but as a lesson which we are to learn somewhat, which once learned fi ceases to be sorrow.—Carlyle. Hall's Catarrh Care Is a Constitutional Cure. Price 73c. Pt.acx at Last.—“There is-nothing now to ina our happiness, ’* as Bass remarked when his wife's mother took her departure. —Boston TranscriptBertram's pills for constipation 10c and 25c. Get the book (free) atvour druggist’s and go by it Annual sales 6,000,000 boxes. Whkx a new paper is started in this seotion of the country, it is reported as another yarn mill in' full operation.—Texas Siftings. 1 have found Piso’s Cure for Consumption an unfailing medicine. R R. Lotz, • 1305 Scott St., Covington, Ky., Oct 1, 180k Xk)RA—“Mr. Spooner says heahvavs feels bae a fish outof water when hois with meJ* Cora—"Theu you’ve hooked him, haven’t you!”—Harper's Bazar. Dox't Neglect a Cough. Take Some Hale’S Honey of Horehound and Tar instanter. Pike’s Toothache Drops Cure in one minuth Nearly every ugly dog is known as “Beauty.”

The logic is the make of it ; the proof-—the use of it The Delong Patent , Hook and Eye.

i Pain often concentrates all < its Misery in

RHEUMATISM

1 £. ST. JACOBS Oil

if you want, to feel i* concentrate ite beating in ■ a core.

National ^ economy. 2 There’s room for a little more of it ^ Too many women are wasting time and strength over a wash-board; rubbing their clothes to^pieces ; wasting their money. You’d boastdnished if you could figure up the actimif money saving in a

PmrunE ■ 'WASHtHQ ■ COMPOUND THE GREAT INVENTION (oh SAVutoJba 4 &/VMSS Without Juju ay 7b 7kt Tcxtvhs.Gu.oa Oh Hkhss L wWvgjtK.

Bubbles or Medals. “ Best sarsaparillas.” When you think of it how contradictory that term is. For there can be only one best in anything—one best sarsaparilla, as there is one highest mountain, one longest river, one deepest ocean. And that best sarsaparilla is-? .... There’s the rub I You can measure mountain height and ocean depth, but how test sarsaparilla ? You could, if you were chemists. But then, do you need to test it? The World’s Fair Committee tested it,—and thoroughly. They went behind the label on the bottle. What did this sarsaparilla test result in? Every make of sarsaparilla shut out of the Fair, except Acer’s. So it was that Ayer’s was the only sarsaparilla admitted to the World’s Fair. The committee found it the best. They had no room for anything that was not the best. And as the best, Ayer’s Sarsaparilla received the medal and awards due its merits. Remember the word “ best ” is a bubble any breath can blow; but there are pins to prick such bubbles. Those others are blowing more “best sarsaparilla” bubbles since the World’s Fair pricked the old ones. True, but Ayer’s Sarsaparilla has the medal The pin that scratches the medal proves it gold. The pin that pricks the bubble proves it wind. We point to medals* not bubbles, when we say: The best sarsaparilla is Ayer’s. •

year by the use orfearline. Millions of women are using it now, but just suppose that all women were equally careful and thrifty, and that every one used Pearline! It’s too much to hope for—but the whole country would be the richer for it. Peddlers and some unscrupulous grocers will OC11U teU you “ this is as good as” or ?'tne same as U T5_ _1_ Pearline.” IT’S FALSE — Pearline ia 11 OaCK never peddled, and if your grocer sods you something in place of Pearling, be honest—said it barf. 473 ■ .

BEST JLN THIS WX'KJUO.

THE RISING SIM STOVE POLISH te cakes for general blacking: of a store. THE SUN PASTE POLISH for s Quick after-dinner shine, applied and polished with a cloth.

Mon* Bros* Propfc, Canton, Mass., U. ASTHMAdr»turted--' Hjnr i«rm,n will sail trial* VllflCU BO XMB BE. TAR BROS. B. CO.. ROCBBSKB, B. I. opium samsi****-**”* , B. WOOUH, iTUIU, SA. A. N. K B. 1577. mnor wurni# w Avmmuuti rixua slats Oit TW saw Hi Hnrtlwwl la IMl l