Pike County Democrat, Volume 27, Number 31, Petersburg, Pike County, 11 December 1896 — Page 7
LEGISLATION NEEDED. 4 Thorough Tot of ttt Rweane Baltlag Secretary Carlisle’* discovery that revenue legislation is absolutely necessary to put the national finances in sound condition is rather belated. Throughout the last session of congress. when bonds were being sold to Ihe prodigious profit of millionaire bankers for the maintenance of a gold reserve which was systematically depleted to provide funds for the current expenses of government, the secretary stoutly insisted that no deficit in the revenue existed, nor need any be feared. Rev. John Jasper has not more pertinaciously preached his theory “the sun do move” than did Secretary Carlisle proclaim the solvency of the treasury „ despite its apparent bankruptcy. _ In the face of this record, the secretary’s admission now that additional internal revenue taxes will be necessary to provide for the expenses of the government is tantamount to admission of systematic misrepresentation by him In the past. Seemingly It was a mistaken Idea that to admit the failure of the Wilson bill wopld be a form of party disloyalty which actuated Carlisle in hisextraordinary course. The condition of the treasury was so patent to all that his repeated denials of any lack of money were received with general incredulity at the- time, and are now made ridiculous by his tardy confession. If, as seems probable, the administration feared the political effect of any supplementary tariff legislation, it was singularly Ill-advised. Nothing in the course of the past four years did more to develop that great force within the democratic party which thrust out Cleveland ami Carlisle than the repeated bond issues which the policy of inaction compelled.
It is not proDODieinai.Mr. tion now for providing more revenue by laying more taxes on tea and other articles of/genexal consumption will be heededj/An expSring congress is little ajvkJto-'fake up burdens which can be left to its successor. That the new administration and the new congress t recently chosen cannot at once take charge of the government is unfortunate. The species of interregnum r which, follows every presidential election is invariable hurtful to business. When the new congress shall assemble—particularly if McKinley ahottld summon It immediately upon his inauguration—it will be the part of patriotism for democrats to refrain from merely factious opposition to revenue measures. Suggestion has been made that the silver senators repeat the exploit of last winter, and defeat any tariff measure which is not accompanied by a silver bill. Public sentiment would infallibly condemn such a course. The republican party, having gnVned complete control of the government, is entitled to put Its policy—which in this year Is definitely high protection and gold monometallism—to the test. If it succeeds in reestablishing prosperity through Its administration of the state, * It will merit and receive the gra'ttud*' of the eitirena without distinction of party. If it fails the people will turn elsewhere for leaders. Meanwhile it should be the policy of those Ip house or senate who may disagree with the majority to confine their opposition to the usual parliamentary forms, disregarding wholly those devices which only Impede instead of directing legislation. The verdict of November 3 should be given its fullest effect.—N. Y. Journal. Voters Who Were Fooled. The Penury 1v&nia coal miners who flelped to roll up the 350,000 majority for McKinley arc now kicking themaclros for believing the stories told them by their losses that prosperity would follow his flection. The operators of western Pennsylvania have decided to shut down the mines for two months this winter, as they claim the markets are overstocked. The miners claim, however, that the reason for the shut down is to compel consumers to pay higher prices for coal. They sav a shut down of two months will be a terrible hardship to them as they have been working irregularly for months at & rafe that gave them a bare subsistence. The suspension in general will make , 6.tX>0 men Idle. Wakeworkers may learn after awhile to take no stock in the preelection statement* of the political spellbinders and bos.se* whose loud professions of friendship before an election are, like pie crust, made to be broken.—Illinou State Register.
Tli* ( ootrtM (Mag Out. The short session of the Fifty-fourth **do uo'Jiau,'" congress is almost upon us. In a few days that bicameral body will meet in Washington to close up its affair*, and it is expected that it will equal the achievement of its first session In ail except the matter of appropriations, which is grateful work in the’ republican congressional mind. It is not expected that the Dingley bill will pass the senate, where it was left w hen congress adjourned last summer. It is i to be noted, too. that good republicans are opposed to its enactment, and it is not likely that it will reach the president. So, the Fifty-fourth congress can continue its do nothing policy during the approaching session, and thereby escape credit for those sins of commiv •ion that republican congresses are deservedly charged with at times.— Binghamton (S’. Y.) Leader. -The republican party ha* amply warning from men whose voices command respect that it must heed the signs of discontent and yield to the demand for political reform in governmental policy. What is the first step of the policy of winning the confidence of the people proposed for the new administration? An extraordinary session of congress is to be celled for the purpose of tinkering with the tariff in such a way that the discrimination in favor of the chosen few is to be inerepsed instead of being — fit. Louis BemtbUe,
THE CUNNING CUCKOOS.
Bow th« Clevelandites Arm Working tt« People. There have been big bluffs made in the game of poker and the game of politics since these two methods, devised for the entertainment of mankind, had their first inning. But the hugest bluff ever attempted is the one Grover Cleveland has been trying of late to play on the American people. He has ,given it out cold and his cuckoos are crowing it from the housetops that “the trusts must and shall be ‘busted.* ’* This is almost as logical as was the deadbeat, who, after he had been thrown into the street, yelled out to the barroom bouncer: “Come out here, dodbing you, and Til throw you out.” Cleveland and his cuckoo army, having metaphorically “fought, bled and died” to assist the trusts to entrench themselves in every branch of the na- ; tional government, now mount the i breastworks and shout to the country: “We’re going to annihilate these Me- j Kinley fellows just- as soon as they give J up their guns and let us do it.** Our own domesticated little cuckoo, ; Davie Francis, was guilty of os absurd J a declaration as “the one just suggested,] in that letter he wrote to the two- j pronged sound money banqueters who i locally and boisterously glorified over the Cleveland and McKinley victory a j few nights ago. He warned the 13 cr 16 members of j the “Vou-tickle-me-and-ril-tickle-you” 1 society present on the occasion that j there was yet a grave danger ahead of j the country in the vast aggregations j of wealth in the hands of combina- ] tions known as trusts. What a funny j little two-for-a-cent each His Corpu- j lency, Cleveland, little Mr. Francis is, ] to be sure! Ilow gullible they both j ! must think the American people. Even i their own deluded followers, whose votes achieved the triumph for the | | trusts in the election of McKinley, will hardly lie fooled by such a transparent ; bunco game as they are trying to rope them into. If the trusts are to be “busted," Cleveland, Francis & Co. are not the persons who can be trusted to do the busting. Servants who leave the fastenings undone so that burglars may enter and loot the' bouse will scarcely do to commission as thief-takers. The democratic party is the sworn foe of the trusts. It can crush them with ease when the father of them all, the sustainer and feeder of them all—the gold trust—is deprived of its power to levy its legalized blackmail upon all the others, and, through them, upon the people. It is the devilfish in the ocean of our commerce, and Mr. Cleveland and his trust-bust mg warriors are doing all they can to prevent its depredations from being interfered with. As the j finances of the country are now adjusted, the gold trust occupies the place of the king in feudal times, the manufacuring and other trust being the nobility .while the people who embrace the trading, carrying and producing classes are in the position of the vassals,who pay tribute to both. Havnig turned the hogs into the people’s corn. Cleveland and his Hessians are swearing that the weevils have been destroying the crops, and declares dought ily his determination to destroy every last one of the vermin, if he has to take n sledgehammer to do, it with. Some of the people of these United States need “gumption powerful bad.” as Uncle Jerry Busk used to say, but rione of them are such fools-as to believe any such flub-dub a9 the ex-sheriff of Erie county and his cuckoos are try- j ing to stuff down the throats of the public.—Kansas City Times.
NOTES AND COMMENTS. -Mark Hanna as United States j senator would be a {treat aid to himself \ in a business way.—Buffalo Times. --The negro vote elected McKinley, but the cabinet positions are all bespoke. The negroes will be put off j with spittoon-cleaning jobs.—Illinois j States Register. -If Hanna is made secretary of j the treasury will any intelligent Arueri- i can need a diagram to understand j the meaning of the policy he stands ! for?—N. Y. World. -It will be strange, indeed, if Oh'o | does not get a cabinet portfolio. Did j j not Hanna furnish the funds, Grosvenor the figures and Foraier the ; silence?—Dayton Timm. -The news that McKinley and Hanna have decided upon an extra ses- J eion is not in correct form; nanna has decided that one should be called and j McKinley will call it.—St. Louis Republic. -—Wall street will not object to a western man for secretary of the trees- | cry provided he is of the Carl isle caliber. Western men of that sort can have their financial views remodeled without a vast amount of inconvenience.—NL Y. Journal. : j -The enormously wealthy sugar trust, which enjoys the protection of a i differential duty, is criticised because it has thrown 1,000 men out of employment for a fortnight just as cold weather has come. But It is part of the business of trusts to throw men out of employment.—St. Louis Post-Dispateh. -The protectionists who talk of a renewal of the reciprocity policy of the McKinley law forget that it requires the consent of both parties to the agreement, and information which has reached Secretary Olney from Brazil goes to show that that country, having once been caught in the reciprocity trap, will not be so easily beguiled into entering it a second time.—Fhiladel- j pbia Record. \ -As one of the results of the unholy alliance between the boltocrahs and the republicans, it is announced that five of the democratic (?) senators in the next congress will support the McKinley tariff policy, whatever that may be. And yet these fire men claim to be democrats, and will possibly desecrate January t by professing to observe It la the Interests of democracy.
AGRICULTURAL HINTS INTERESTING FACTS. Bftlstainlai Good Roods Costs Less That Keeping Up Poor Omen In one of his famous speeches on good roads and the improvement of city streets, Col. Albert A. Pope, president of the Pope Manufacturing company, of Hartford, Conn., stated the following interesting facts: “As a result of elaborate experiment, made to ascertain the relative resistance or friction of different pavements, H has been established that awhile 200 j pounds* force is required to draw one ton over an ordinary dirt road, 100 pounds will do the same work on macadam, 33 pounds on best granite blocks and 15 pounds on asphalt. Asrfpartic* I’lar instance of this, it is estimated that in the city of New York there \
A ROAD LIKE THIS IS A COSTLY LUX* URY. Are 12,000 trucks, carrying an average load of iy, tons, for 12 miles on each of 300 days in the year at an average daily cost of $4 for each truck. The result is about 63,000,000 tons transported one mile in every year at a total cost of 514,000,000, or at the rate of over 22 cents per ton-mile. The excessive nature of this charge is seen when it is remembered that the same floods are now carried by rail at six-tenth# of one cent per mile. On asphalt road pavements the same horses could transport a load three times as heavy as on the present rough stone pavements. If a saving in transportation is proportional to the load carried, it would amount to nearly $10,000,000 per annum. It is safe to say that at least onehalf this amount could be saved by substituting smooth pavements for those now in use in New York; and in any city where the pavements are on ; an average poorer and rougher than those in New York, it is clear that the proportionate saving by the introduction of the best street surfaces will be even greater. Good roads are com para tively cheaper to maintain and to use than poor ones.” WORK FOR CONVICTS, itoad Building Would Prevent Competition with Free Labor. In a good many of the states the inmates of penitentiaries are already employed, to a greater or less extent, in improving the highways, and everywhere the verdict is that good roaua have been secured where they would not have been built for a century to come if the taxpayers had been obliged to initiate the work and bear the whole cost of it. Curiously enough, this most excellent scheme has made most progress in the communities where it is connected with a prison system that is strongly and justly reprehended. In those states of the south where they have what is known as the “chain gang system,” the idea of putting the prisoners at work on the highways suggested itself naturally. The convicts were kept in open-air camps with guards furnished by the state, and nothing was more natural than to engage them in road repair in the vicinity.
Where convicts are housed in great buildings of stone and iron, and where they have been put to labor at mechanical employment, the transition is not so simple and natural. Still it can be made to a certain extent, and that without destroying or impeding the work of prison reform. In South Carolina there are now said to be, about 600 convicts at work 03 the highways, and the value of what tLey have done has produced such on effect upon the people of the rural sections of that particularly progressive state that county commissioners everywhere are stirring up the subject of systematic road construction. Tennessee has a law that permits it, and New York has authorized a similar experiment. It seems to us that the New York law might very profitably be adopted in Minnesota at the next session of the legislature. This contemplates the employment of only a portion of the state's convicts, to be selected by the prison warden, probably with the assistance and approval of the state board of charities and corrections, who should be put to work on road improvement under the direction of experts in road construction engaged by the state. It is unquestionably true that the work of reforming the criminal, of which we must never lose sight by exalting the commercial motive, is entirely consistent with utilizing convict labor on the highways. There is a very large percentage of prison population for wheru this would be the most desirable form of labor. By 'judicious select ion of men, and by engaging them in email gangs upon the highways, it is probable that pore wholesome influence might be brought to bear Upon them even than in a well-conducted prison itself. At any rate, here is an occupation which does not compete with honest {labor, which is available for a great * number of convicts to whom mechanical pursuits are not naturally adapted, and whose results would be in the highest degree beneficial to the state. We believe that further experiment along this line should be made at once, and that our own community should attempt it.—81 Paul (Minn.) Globe. Potato blight seems to be on the increase. Bordeaux mixture to the nn$0*
AROUND THE GLOBE. Max O’Sell says that It was in the streets of Budapesth and in the draw* ing-rooms of Dublin he found the finest and the most beautiful types of womanhood. A karri tree was recently blown down in West Australia which measured 174 feet from the roots to the lowest branch, at which point the trunk was 14 feet round. When King Thebaw of Burma was dethroned the English left him an estate i^ his own country for his maintenance. They now propose to seize on th^rincome from it in order to pay Therfcis great scarcity of breadstuff^ in South Africa at present, the crops having failed, owing to drought. Railroad rates on imported grain have been reduced and the Transvaal government has been asked to remit until the emergency is past.
FROM MANY LANDS. By adopting the American method of handling contagious disease when it becomes epidemic the Honoluluans have succeeded in stamping out every vestige of cholera on their island. La Savoyartle, the 35-ton bell presented by the diocese of Chaubery to the Church of the Sacred Heart on Montmatre, the highest point in Paris, has just been delivered and will be rung from a temporary scaffold while the church tower is going up. In the Kremlin at Moscow they are regilding the great copper crosses that, surmount the cupolas of the Church of the Ascension, where exars are crowned, in preparation for the coming coronation. Four hundred thousand mugs, bearing the czar's portrait, are to be distributed to the people, who will urink free beer from them. FOREIGN NOTES. The duchess of Somerset was thrown from her horse while hunting recently and very seriously hurt. Manchester Quakers intend to apply the closure rule to the spirit. At the»r coming conference a time limit will be imnosed on the speakers. Gentle treatment, St. Jacobs Oil soothes Neuralgia and cures it It fades away. It Is brave to overcome; it is saintly to endure. Fits stopped free aud permanently cured. No fits after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. F*ree $2 trial bottle & treatise. Da Kune, 983 Arch st.Phila, Pa A good man finds good wherever he goes, because the good in him brings out good in others.—Ram’s Horn. Goon times. Happy state. St Jaoobs Oil cures pain right up to date. Don’t go with tbeeenowd simply because It Is a crowd.—Ham’s Horn. the Markets. New York. December 7,1894 rATTLE—Native Steers.» 4 10 m 4 «» COTTON-Middlius.4. 7 FLlHJK-Winter Wheat... 3 75 W H E AT—Na 1 Hard... CORN-No. 2..-i. 29 OATS-No 8.;...<. PORK-New Mess... 8 25 ST. LOUIS? COTTON —Middling.|. 7H# BKEVES»-Steers... 3 CO (® Cows and Heifers, 2 oo 44 CALVES . 5 00 & HOGS-Fair to Select.. 3 u> 4j4 SHEEP—Fair to Choice.;. 2 35 44 FLOCR-Patents.J. 4 60 w Fancy to Extra do.. 3 50 44 WHEAT-No. 2 Red Winter.. 44 CORN—No. 2 Mixed.j.... OATS—No. 2.i..... RYE-Nat.4. 3* TOBACCO—Lugs.3 00 Leaf Burley. 4 50 HAY -ClearTimothy... » oO BCTTE R -Choice Dai ryi. 14 EGOS—Fresh ..4. PORK—Standard (New*. BACON—Clear Rib... 4St4 LARD—Prime Steam .. CHICAGO. CATTLE-Native Steers...... 350 HOGs—Fair to Choice . i. 3 00 SHEEP-Fair Ao Choice. .... 2 25 FLOUR—Winter Patents.. 4 50 Spring Patent^. 4 15 WHEAT-No. 2 Spring ....... .... No. 2 Red. 80 CORN—Na 2. 23 44 OATS—No.2. 44 PORK— Mess (newt. . 6 90 n* KANSAS CITY-CATTLE-ShippingSteers.-... 3 2‘> @ HOGS-All Gra.ies.4. 3 <W 44 WHEAT—Na2Red.4. & OATS-No.2.4. 17*44 CORN—Na2.4. 18**4 NRW ORLEANS. FEOCR—High Grade. - .4. 4 «5 a CORN-No. 2....4. 44 OATS— Western. 44 H.W Choice. 14 50 44 PORK-New Mess-1. 41 BACON-Sides.4. 44 COTTON—Middling....., .. 44 LOUISVILLE WH E AT-No. 2 Red.... 4. CORN—No. 2 Mixed ...4. OATS—Na 2 Mixed._4. POUK-New Mess —,4...... BACON-Ciear Rib.... .4.. .... COTTOS-M ddimg.... 96 S3 MH 22*44 23* 20 64 21*4 7 50 8 OO »h 7, «4 TH
la • «wm> which afflicts ow 73 Hf cent. t( the American people. It is s dangerous disease because'it net only poltoni %hm moW In — c J—— : causes heaviness. appreasleajmd dulls the intellect. Then fellew chronic fellow chrome headache, less of appetite, alow digestion. nervousness, had SSS: ^"laf-“>* low liver and kidney able form. In1 dreaded malady It wtK eventually briny ea diaesse la some iacurt sufferers from this are speedily Warner’s SAPS Cure and Warner's SAP E Pills. Leading physicians the world over, have acknowledged this tact, and thousands of people through, out the land have testified to It. f t^t has «f fcaUay tho waq rannot do SSWor^XT fcdiO^ thn need of f rtf* ft ‘ I better than tty the great > ... _^ -
ThtreIs more Catarrh In this section of I the country than all other diseases put to* gether, and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many rears doctors pronounced it a local disease, j 2nd prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced i t incurable. Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney is Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the svstem. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address F. J. Cue net & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall’s Family Fills are the best. The setting of a great hope is like the setting of the sun. The brightness of our life is gone, shadows of the evening fall around us, and the world seems but a broader shadow.—Longfellow. Garden Spots of the South. The Passenger Department of the Louisville & Nashville R. R. has just issued a bundretf page book with the above title. It is descriptive of the resources and capabilities af the soil of the counties lying along thiaUne in the states of Keu lucky, 'lYnaes see, Alabama, Southern Mississippi and Western Florida. It also contains a county map of the above mentioned states, ana is wdfi worthy of a perusal of any one in terested in thdSouth. A copy will bo scut to any address upon receipt of ten cents in silver or stamps, by C. P. Atmoub, Ocu. Pass. Agt., Louisville, Ky. Semi-monthly excursions So uth. Write for particulars. Boh. down many a man's religion, and it will be found to have beeu nothing but froth.—Ram's Horn. When paiu ceases, no sufferer ever regrets the price he paid for St. Jacobs Oil. No MiM can climb higher than his own ambition. False Witnesses. There are kuaves now and then met with who represeut certain local bitters and poisonous stimuli as identical with or possessing proper, ies akin to those of Hostetler’s Stomach Hitters. These scamps only succeed in foisting their trashy e mpounds upon people unacquaiuted with the genuine article, which is as much their opposite as day is to night. Ask and take no substitute for the grand remedy for malaria, dyspepsia, constipation, rheumatism and kidney trouble. YoPKO Medical Student (to charity patient)—“I think you must have a a some kind of a -af^yer, but our class lias on v gone as far as convulsions. I'll come in a week when we get to fevers.” How to cure Rheumatism! Use St. Jacobs Oil. It subdnes. It cures. The devil can meet eloquence without trouble, but he has never been able to stand before lovel—Ram's Horn. SJ* Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoko Your Life Away. If yon want to,quit tobacco using easily and fore ver, be made well,-strong, magnetio, full of new life and vigor, take Iso-To-Bac, the wonder-worker that makes weak men strong. Many gain ten pounds in ten days. Over 400,000 cured. Buy No-To-Bac from your own druggist, who will guarantee a cure. Booklet and sample mailed free. Ad. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. Doctor—‘‘Now, whatdid yonr father and mother die or?” Applicant for Life Insurance—‘‘Well. sir. I can't say as 1 exactly remember; but it wasn't anything serious.” For. Whooping Cough, Piso’s Cure Is a successful remedv. M.P. Dieter, 67 Throop Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y., Nov. 14, 'Vi. A right state of heart cannot be maintained, without keeping a close watch on tbe tongue.—Ram's Horn. Crutches and cruel pains from Sciatica. From St Jacobs Oil the cure of it Our lives are the open volume the world reads.
W» have received from Warner’s Baft# Core Co., of Rochester, N. Y., whose advertisement may be found In another column, their attractive pamphlet for 1897, of which five million copies, it is stated, u» being distributed free by mail and through druggists. It contains besides advertising matter, biographical sketches and portraits of the Presidents of the United States in* eluding President-electMcKinley. The pern* sal of the pamphlet affords abundant proof that Warner’s Sa’e Cure Co., which has twenty years of sttccess back of it, is as active and enterprisk g as Over. Oxs Matkos—“Since I have beeni I have tuuuht my husband good taste.* Auotiier—“tteatly? It is a good thing for you that you did not teach him before yos were married.*’—Tit-Bits. \ 1 ,1
When the appetite fails there is no nse fas trying to tempt the palate with delicatejbod. No matteT how good and well-cooked- and “appetizing” the food may be, it cannot give any nourishment unless the stomach i» able to digest it. Nature indicates the State of the constitution by the loss of appetite. This is an unfailing indicator. It show* that something is fundamentally wrong with the nutritive functions. The only true natural relief must be a» searching and fundamental as the trouble it aims to overcome. It is the thorough deepsearching character of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery, which causes the marvelous efficacy in all bilious and digestive difficulties. It creates that healthful vitalityof the entire digestive and nutritive organism which produces both the natural desire for food ana the organic capacity to assimilate arid transform it into nourishing, revivifying blood and healthy tissue. It givew appetite, digestion and sound sleep, and builds up solid muscular strength and vital nerve - energy. H. H, Thompson, Esq., of P. O: Box 4, Kip pie, Blair Co.. Penu'a. writes: ** 1 had been troubled with extreme vomiting in summer season, always after eating; had to be very careful* t times to get anything to stay on my stomach at all; had been talnng other medicines, but without effect. I heard a friend speak of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, ami thought 1 would give it a trial. 1 used about five bottles of jt and think it is the only medicine that did vtff any good, as I have a splendid appetite now. and aril not using any medicine at all and don't think 1 need any more.’* * A man who is suffering from the evil effects of constipation doesn’t feel like work, and can’t even enjoy his leisure hours. Dr. .Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets are » sure, swift, safa^and permanent cure for constipation, ffley are tiny, riigar- coated granules. One little *iPellet” is a gentle laxative, and two a mild cathartic. They never gripe. Dishonest druggists try te get you to take a substitnte for the take of the added profit 9 If you ever want to sell or exchange your Organ, remember it will be twice as valuable if the name on the front is ESTEY V ...=== Write for Illustrated Catalogue with prices, to E&tey Organ Company, Brattleboro, Yt opium: n “^DRUNKENNESS Cured.
Important Notice! IMW
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Milk Pans, and pails, and cans» I and bottles (even f baby’s)—or anything that you want particularly clean, ought to be washea with Pearline.
Y 1 =^= ■ --- You 11 save work in doing it, and it’s a great deal more thoroughly done; Dairies and dealers use Pearline extensively. Just tiy ifc once, on your milk-ware or butter-ware—-and then say if it isn’t the most satisfactory way of cleaning. Pearline is the most economical thing you can use, too. You get so muck* more out of it ^ \ ■ ' ■
oooo LIGHTEN THE IUS » HUMANITY. p&ggWffcnstRur&Tkr ^^>=2 Bar ir Osamas Mr Ki-23All DmKKiisn I m WL m mi j umi•mmn ml TheSeriinfiReied/Cass^
USE NO OTHER THAN YUCATAN. *. N. K., B. 1034.
