Pike County Democrat, Volume 28, Number 6, Petersburg, Pike County, 18 June 1897 — Page 3
TALMAGES SERMON. Practical Lessons Taught by Eve’s Disobedience. ▲ Poorly Rerouted laqataltlvenees Dm* Soroai—The Sweetest ot Fruit* Hometime* Productive of the Greatest A|oay. Bev. T. DeWitt Ta Image, in the following- sermon, gives a new interprepretation of the Calamity in Paradise. It is based on the text: And when the woman saw that the tree was food for food and that it was pleasant to the eyes, and a tree to be desired to make one wise, she took of the fruit thereof and did eat, and save also unto her husband with her, and he did eat.-Genesis liL. & It is the first Saturday afternoon in the world’s existence. Ever since sunrise Adam has been watching the brilliant pageantry of wings and scales and clouds, and in his first lessons in soology and ornithology and ichthology he has noticed that the robins fly the air in twos, and that the fish swim the waters in two, and that the lions walk the fields in twos, and in the warm redolence of that Saturday afternoon he falls off into slumber; and as if by allegory to teach all ages that the greatest of earthly blessings is sound sleep, this paradisaical somnolence ends with the discovery on the part of Adaip of a corresponding intelligence just landed on a new planet. Of the mother of all the living 1 speak—Eve, the first, the fairest, and the best. I make me a garden. I inlay the paths with mountain moss, and 1 border them with pearls from Ceylon and diamonds from tiolconda. Here and there are fountains tossing in the sun.light and ponds that ripple under the paddling of the swans. 1 gather lilies from the Amazon, and orange groves from the tropics, and tamarids from Goyaz. There are woodbine and honeysuckles climbing over the wall, and starred spaniels sprawling them.selves on the grass. 1 invite au»»d these trees the larks, and the brown thrushes, and the robins, and all the brightest birds of heaven, and they stir the air with infinite chirp and carol. And yet the place is a desert filled with darkness and death as compared with the residence of the woman of the text, the subject of my story. Never since have such skies looked down through such leaves into such waters! Never has river wave had such curve and sheen and hank as adorned the l*ison. the Havilah, the Gihon. and the Hiddekel, even the pebbles being bdellium and onyx stone! What fruits, with no curculio to stiug the rind! What flowers, with no slug to gnaw the root! What atmosphere, with no frost to chill and with no heat to consume! Bright colors tangled in the grass. Perfume in the air. Music in the sky. Great scene of gladness and joy. Bight there under a bower of leaf and vine and shrub occurred the first marriage. Adam took the hand of this immaculate daughter of God and pronounced the ceremony when he said: "Bone of my bone, and flesh of my flesh.” A forbidden tree stood up in the midst of that exquisite park. Eve sauntering out alone one day looks up at the tree and sees the beautiful fruit, and wonders if it is sweet, and wonders if it is sour, and standing there, says: “1 think 1 will just put my hand upon the fruit; jt will do no damage to the tree; 1 will not tak^ the fruit to eat. but 1 will just take it down to examine it." She put the fruit to her teeth, she tasted, she allowed Adain also to taste the fruit, the door of the world opened, and the monster Sin entered. Let the heaveus gather blackmess. let the windssigh on the bosom of the hills, aud cavern, and desert, and earth, and sk}- join in one long, deep, hell-rending howl—“The word is lost!" Beasts that before were harmless and full of play put forth claw, and sting, and tooth, and tusk. Birds whet their beak for prey. Clouds troop in the aky. Sharp thorns shoot up through the short grasa Blasting on the leaves. All the chords of that great harmony •re snapped. Upon the brightest home this world ever saw our first patents turned their back and led forth on a path of sorrow the broken-hearted
lUjt u* n i uiuru i , • lk> you not see, in the first place, the danger of a poorly-regulated inquisitiveness? She wanted to know how the fruit tasted. She found out, but 1,000 years have deplored that unhealthful curiosity. Healthful curiosity has done a great deal for letters, for art, for science, and for religion. It has gone down into the depths of the earth with the geologist and seen the first chapter of Uenesis written in the book of nature illustrated with engraving on rock, and it stood with the antiquarian while he blew the trumpet of resurrection over buried Herculaneum and Pompeii, until from their sepulcher there came up shaft and terrace and amphitheater. Healthful curiosity has enlarged the telescopic vision of the astronomer until worlds hidden in the distant heavens have trooped forth and have joined the choir praising the Lord. Planet weighed against planet and wildest comet lassooed with resplendent law. Healthful curiosity has gone down and found the tracks of the eternal God in the polypi and the starfish under the sea and the majesty of the great Jehovah encamped under the gorgeous curtains of the dahlia. It has studied the spots on the sun, and the larva on a beech leaf, and the light under a firefly's wing, and the terrible eye-glance of a condor pitching from Chimborazo. It has studied the myriads of aniinaculae that make up the phosphorescence of a ship’s wake, and the mighty maze of suns, and spheres, and constellations and galaxies that blaze on in the march of God. Healthful curiosity has stood by the inventor until forces that were hidden for ages came to wheels, and levers, and shafts and shuttles—forces that fly the air, or swim the sea, or cleve the mountain, until the earth jars, and roars, and rings, and craok- , lea, and booms, with strange mechanism, and shins with nostrils of hot
steam and yokes of fire, draw the continents together. I say nothing against heathful curiosity. May it hare other Leyden jars, and other electric batteries, and other foltaic piles, and other magnifying glasses, with which to storm the barred castles of the natural world until it shall surrender its last secret. We thank God for the geological curiosity of Prof. Hitchcock, and the mechanical curiosity of Liebig, and the zoological curiosity of Cuvier, and the inventive curiosity of Edison; but we must admit that unhealthful and irregular inquisitiveness has rushed thousands and tens of thousands into ruin. Eve just tasted the fruit. She was curious to find out how it tasted, and that curiosity blasted her and blasted all nations. So there are clergymen in this day inspired by unhealthful inquisitiveness. who have tried to look through the keyhole of God’s mysteries—mysteries that were barred and bolted from all human inspection, and they have wrenched their whole moral nature out of joint by trying to pluck fruit from branches beyond their reach, or have come out on limbs of the tree from which they have tumbled into ruiu without remedy. A thousand trees of religious knowledge from which we may eat and get ad\ant«ge; but from certain trees of mystery how many have plucked their ruin! Election, free agency, trinity, resurrection —in the discussion of these subjects hundreds and thousands of people ruiu the soul. There are men who actually have been kept'out of the kingdom of Heaven because they could not under stand who Melchisedec was not! Oh. how many have been destroyed by an unhealthful inquisitiveuess, It is seen in all directions. There are those who stand with the eje-stare and mouth-gape of curiosity. They are the first to hear a falsehood, build it auother story high and two wings to it About other people's apparel, about other people's business, about other people's financial condition, about other people's affairs, they are overanxious. Every nice piece of gossip stops at their door, and they fatten and luxuriate in the endless round of the great world of tittle-tattle. They invite and sumptuously entertain at their house Col. Twaddle and Esquire Chitchat and Gov. Smalltalk. Whoever hath an innuendo, whoever hath a scandal, whoever hath a valuable secret, let him come and sacrifice it to this goddess of splutter. Thousands of Adams and Eves do nothing but eat fruit that does not belong to them. Men quite well known as mathematicians failing in this computation of moral algebra; good sense plus good breeding, minus curiosity, equals minding your own affairs. Then, how many young men,through curiosity, go through the whole realm of French novels, to see whether they are really as bad as moralists have pronounced them! They come near the verge of the precipice just to look off. They want to see how far it really is down, but they lose their balance while they look, and fall into remediless ruin; or, catching themselves, clamber up, blecdiug and ghastly, on the rock, gibberiug with curses or groauing ineffectual prayer. By all means encourage healthful inquisitivness, by all meant discourage illy-regulated curiosity. . The subject also impresses me with the fact that fruits that arc sweet to the taste may afterward produce great agony, Forbidden fruitfor Eve was so pleasant she invited her husband also to take Of it; but her banishment from Paradise and *>.0dUyears of sorrow, and wretchedness, and war. and woe. paid for that luxury. Sin may be very sweet at the start, and may induce great wretchedness afterward. The cup of sin is sparkling at the top, but there is death at the bottom. Intoxication has great exhilaration for awhile, and it fillips the blood, and it makes a man see five stars whereothers can see only one star, and it makes the poor man rich, and turns cheeks which are white red as roses; but what about the dreams that come after, when it seems falling from great
ItV *1 VO, V** JUVWHWVT u vvuv « *«« cied disasters, aud the perspiration stands on the forehead—the night dew of everlasting darkuess —and he is ground under the horrible hoof of nightmares shrieking with lips that crackle with all-consuming torture? “Rejoice, O young man, in thy youth, and let thy heart cheer thee in the days of thy youth; but know thou that for all these things God will bring thee into judgmentT’ Sweet at the start, horrible at tire last Go into that hall of revelry, where ungodly ufirth staggers and blasphemes. Listen to the senseless gabble, see the last trace of intelligence dashed out from the faces made in God's own image. “Aha! aha?' says the roystering inebriate; “this is joy for you; till high your cups, my boys. I drink to my wife's misery and my children's rags and my God's defiance.’’ And he knows not that a fiend stirs the goblet in his hand and that adders uncoil from the dregs and thrust their forked tongues hissing through the froth on the rim. The Philistines jeered and laughed and shouted at Samson. Oh. they wanted him to make sport for them, and he made sport for them.! How bright and gay was the scene for a little while! After awhile the giant puts one hand against this pillar and the other hand against that pillar, aud .bows himself and 3,000 merry-makers are mashed like grapes in a wine press. Sin rapturous at the start, awful a£ the last. That one Edcnic transgression did not seem to be much, but it struck a blow which to this day makes the earth stagger. To find out the consequences of that one sin you would have to compel the world to throw open all its prison doors and display the crime, and threw open all its hospitals and display the diseastfeand throw open all the insane asylums and show the wretchedness, and open all the sepulchers and ahow' the dead, and j open all the doors of the lost world and show the damned. That one Kdeuie transgression stretched chords of misery across the heart of the world
and struck then with dolorous wailing, and it has seated the plagues upon the air and the shipwrecks upon the tempest, and fastened, like a leech, famine to the heart of the sick and dying nations. Beautiful at the start, horrible at the last. Oh, how many have experienced it! Are there here those who are votaries of pleasure? Let me warn you, my brother. You pleasure boat is far from shore, and your summer day is ending roughly, for the winds and the waves are loud-voiced, and the overcoming clouds are all awrithe and agleam with terror. You are past the “narrows,” and almost outside the “Hook,” and if the Atlantic take the free,frail mortal, thou shalt never get to shore again. Put back, row swiftly, swifter, swifterl Jesus from the shore casteth a rope. Clasp it quickly, now or never. Ah, are there not some of you who are freighting all your loves and hopes upon a vessel which shall never reach the port of Heaven? Thou nearest the breakers. One heave upon the rocks. Oh, what an awful crash was that! Another lunge may crush thee beneath the spars or grind thy bones to powder amid the torn timbers. Overboard for your life, overboard! Trust not that loose plank nor attempt the wave, but quickly clasp the feet of Jesus walking on the watery pavement, shouting until He hear thee: “Lord, save me, or I perish.” Sin beautiful at the start— oh, how sad, how distressful at the last! The ground over which it leads you is hollow. The fruit it offers to your taste is poison. The promise it makes to you is a lie. Over that ungodly banquet the keen sword of God’s judgment hangs, and there are ominous handwritings on the walls. Observe also in this subject how repelling sin is when appended to great attractiveness. Since Eve's death there has been no such perfection of womanhood. You could suggest an attractiveness to the body or suggest any refinement to the manner. You could add no gracefulness to the gait, no luster to the eye, no sweetness to the voice. A perfect God made her a perfect woman. to be the companion of a perfect man in a perfect home, and her entire nature vibrated in accord with the beauty and song of Paradise, lint she rebelled against God's government, and with the s;ime hand with whieh she plucked the fruit she launched upon the world the crimes, the wars, the tumults that have set the universe awailing. A terrible offset to all her attractiveness. \Ye are not surprised when we find men and women naturally vulgar goiug into transgression. \Ye expect that people who live in the ditch shall have the manners of the ditch; but how shocking when we find sin appended to superior education and to the refinements of social life! The accomplishments of Mary Queen of Scots make’ her patronage of Darnley, the profligate, the more appalling. The genius of Catherine II. of Russia only sets forth in more powerful eontrast her unappeasable ambition. The translations from the Greek and the Latin by Elizabeth, aud her wonderful | qualifications for a queen, make the more disgusting her caprieiousness of affection and her hotness of temper. The greatness of Byron’s mind makes the more alarming Byron's sensuality. My subject'also impresses pae with the regal influence of woman. When 1 see Eve with this powerful influence over Adam aud over the generations that have followed, it suggests to me j the great power all women have for |
good or evil. I hare no sympathy, nor have you, with the hollow flatteries showered upon woman from the platform and the stage. They mean nothing; they are accepted as nothing. Woman'* nobility consists in the exercise of a Christian influence; and when I see this powerful influence of Eve upon her husband and upon the whole human race I make up my mind that the frail arm of woman cau strike a blow which will resound through all eternity down among the dungeons or up among the thrones. Of course, 1 am not speaking of representative women—of Eve, who ruined the race by one fruit-picking; of J&el, who drove a spike through the head of Sisera the warrior; of Esther, who overcame royalty; of Abigail, who stopped a host by her own beautiful prowess; of Mary, who nursed the world's Saviour; of Grandmother Lois, immortalized in her grandson Timothy; of Charlotte Corday, who drove the dagger through the heart of the assassin of her lover, or of Marie Antoinette, who, by one look from the balcony of her castle, quieted a mob, her own scaffold the throne of forgiveness and womanly courage. I speak not of these extraordinary persons, but of those who^ unambitious for political power, as wives and mothers and sisters and daughters, attend to the thousaud sweet offices of home. When at last we come to calculate the forces that decided the destiny of nations it will be be found that the mightiest and grandest influence came from home, where the wife cheered up despondency and fatigue and sorrow by her own sympathy, and the mother trained her child for Heaven, starting the little feet on the path to the Celestial City; and the sisters by their gentleness refined the manners of the brother; and the daughters were diligent in their kindness to the aged, throwing wreaths of blessing on the road that leads father and mother down the steep of years., God bless our homes. And may the home on earth be the vestibule of our home in Heaven, in which place may we all meet—father, mother, son, daughter, brother, sister, grandfather and grandmother and grandchild, and the entire group of precious ones, of whum we mast say in the words of transporting Charles Wesley: One fan by we dwell ia Him One church above, beueath; Though now dividad to; the -dream— T*e narrow stream of death; One army of th- It vine Uod. To HU command we bow; Pan of the host have cr»s>e 1 the flood. And part arc- tf»oa{ now. If you have anything left to abed, shed it now.—Atchison Globe.
PORTABLE PIG STY. Oae That Afford* Ample Shelter ui la Warm and Dry. We fully appreciate the fact that die hog is not an attractive feature about the home or dooryard, and would not tolerate him running at his dear, sweet will and risk chances of breaking some of the ten commandments. We would put him to the rear of buildings, out of sight, out of hearing (maybe) and load his snout with curved steel. We doubt the propriety of erecting permanent hog houses, to be used for years and years on the same soil, thereby often inviting disease and unhealthy swine. Two years ago, while spending a day with your able correspondent^
PORTABLE PIG STY. John M. Jamison, I noticed several portable pig houses which he loaded on sleds and moved where he run his swine. I stole his idea, and I think I improved on it by erecting the sty on sled runners, ready to hitch a team to and haul about. The illustration shows the idea, which is simple. The runners are two by eight inches, and eight feet long. The roof is made from 12-foot boards cut in half. The width is six feet from out to out. There are two cross ties, one at each end of sled, with two uprights for door, two by four inches; all parts well nailed together. One of these houses is an excellent shelter for brood sows, as they seldom lie on their young, owing to the ridged roof; They afford excellent shelter, are warm, dry, and will hold half a dozen 200-pound pigs. When they get foul a team will move it in a few minutes to a clean spot, and the accumulations underneath and around its last location can be hauled away. By all means the farmer should raise enough pork to supply his own needs in meat and lard and to consume waste which other animals will not eat.— George E. Scott, in Ohio Farmer.
HORSES DECREASING. Uood Animal* Will lip Hard to Get u Few Year* lienee. The large majority of farmers who own horses seem to be quite anxious to get rid of them, even at low prices. Where the farm is mortgaged, and the horses can be spared better than any^ thing else on the farm, this is all right, as it is better to lose the horse than the home; but where it is not. we regard it as very unwise and foolish, says the Kentucky Stock Farm. In a country like ours, where one extreme follows another, it is not wise to float with the current or follow the herd. From 18S0 to 1890 we bred entirely too many horses of all classes, and as a natural consequence we are now’ suffering a period of low prices. Our next predicament, if all signs do not fail, w’ill be a great senreity of horses. We base this opinion upon the fact that every*b©4yis selling and that very few are breeding. We do not believe there are more than ten per cent, of the horses being bred in the United States to-day that there were six years ago. This cannot possibly help but produce a great shortage, and this shortage in supply can have but one effect—namely, to increase the price. As it takes five years to produce a four-year-old colt, and as the time cannot be abridged by any possible means, and as the breeding began to fall off quite materially in 1893, four years ago, the shortage is bound to begin to manifest itself inside of the next two years. The produce of mares bred this season will not be four years old. or ready for market, before 1902, and between this uud that time we predict that there will be a much greater shortage of horses of all kinds than has been seen in this country for many years. NOTE& FOR SHEPHERDS. Use large, well-built rams. When sheep are feeding on rape they need salt. When sheep are exposed to storms they suffer loss. Sheep husbandry is about the easiest pursuit in agriculture. Aim to produce uniformity in your flock. Breed carefully. Sheep industry in the Dakotas is all the time growing in importance. Improvements in the sheep breeding business will help the northwest greatly. Bean straw is highly recommended for sheep, and anybody can grow beans, and grow plenty of them. It is recommended to sow rape seed at the rate of three pounds in the corn field at the last cultivation. Rape is excellent for sheep. We look fur the time when sheep husbandry will assume something like its old-time importance and profitableness in the west.'—Western Plowman. Experiment* with Potatoes. Experiments conducted on Long Island by the .New York station for the purpose of comparing the relative profits from using 1,000 pounds and 2.900 pounds of commercial fertilizer per acre on potatoes showed the smaller quantity to 0>e the more profitable and that in the single application of 2.000 pounds per acre, 25 per cent, more nitrogen, 65 per cent, more potash and ueurly five times as much phosphoric acid were added to the soil, as were removed in two crops. This indicates that too heavy applications of improperly mixed fertilizers may result in serious loss on Long Island and elsewhere.—Agricultural Kpitomist. t
THE MARKETS. New York. Jane 14. CATTLE—Natire Steers,.« 4 40 COTTON—Middling. 7* FLOUR—W inter Wheat. S SO WHEAT—No. l Northern.. CORN-No. *... OATS—No. 2... PORK—New Mess. 8 80 ST. LOUIS COTTON—Middling. BEEVES—Steers.... 328 Cows and Heifers .. 2 60 CALVES—teach). 6 50 HOGS-Fair to Select.. 3 20 SHEEP—Fair to Choice. 3 00 FLOUR—Patents... 4 40 & Fancy to Extra do... WHEAT—No.2 Red Winter... CORN—No. 2Mixed. .... OATS-No. 2... RYE—No. 2. 32 TOBACCO—Lugs. 3 00 _ Leaf Burley....... 4 50 HAY—Clear Timothy.......... 8 80 B CJTTE R—Choice Hairy........ 9 EGOS—i’Tesh.L.A PORK—Standard (new).. J... B ACON—Clear Rib.J.. & LARO—Prime Steam... .... & CHICAGO C ATTLE—Native Steers.. 3 90 @ HOGS—Fair to Choice.. 3 15 & SHEEP—Fair to Choice.. 3 00 @ FLOUR-Winter Patents. 4 00 & Spring Patents. 3 70 (& WHE AT—No. 2 Spring.. 69?»@ No. 2 Red. 73 ft CORN-No. 2. OATS-No. 2. PORK—Mess (n6W). 7 45 & KANSAS CITY. CATTLE—Shipping Steers.... 3 25 © HOGS—All Grades. 3 20 @ WHEAT-No. 2 Hard.. & OATS—No. 2 White. 18 © CORN-No. 2. 21 (& NEW ORLEANS FLOCR-HighGrade...... 4 15 © CORN-No. 2. & OAT'S—Western... 25 © HAY -Choice. 15 50, © PORK—New Mess.. % BACON—Sides. © COTIMN —M iddling. 7*46 LOUISVILLE WHE AT—No. 2 Red. OOKN-No. 2 Mixed.. OATS-No. 2 Mist'd.. PORK- New Mess. 9 00 *6 BACON-Clear Rib. 5 V© COTTON—Middling.. 7^©
WASHING BLANKETS. Summer is the best time for blankets. To do the work satisfaetari^ fill a tub half full of soft hot water fl» which half a bar of Ivory soap hasbse% dissolved, and wash gently with tU hands. Bosin soap and hard rabbity ruins blankets. When clean rinse welL hang on the line in the sun. As soon aw dry, fold evenly and put away securely in a box or closet. Blankets wadnA thus will remain fresh and soft law years. _ ELIZA R. PAR KIP. Wh«r« Friendship OMM. "Ntf Cynthia—Do you think Frank wfR love me when 1 am old, Mand. Maud—Well, there’s one thing, dear, you’ll soon know.—Pick-Me-Up. Shake Into Year Shoes Allen’s Foot-Ease, a powder for the feet. It cures painful, swollen, smarting feet an# instantly takes the sting out of corns an# bunions. It’s the greatest comfort discovery of the age. Allen’s Foot-Ease makes tight tm new shoes feel easy. It is a certain cure for sweating, callous, not, tired, aching fwt. Try it to-day. Sold by all druggists an# shoe stores. 25c. Trial package FRKK. Write to Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y. When we say that wisdom is better thorn rubies we generally mean our wisdom an# other people’s rubies.—N. Y. Weekly. Hall’i Catarrh Care Is a Constitutional Cure. Price 75e. “I want something nice in oil for a din-ing-room.” “Yes? madam. A landscape «• a box of sardines?” After six years* suffering, I was cured by Piso’s Cure.—Mary Thomson, 29)< ObisAve., Allegheny, Pa., March 19, *94. The poorer a man is, the more agents tsjyto sell him things.—Washington DemocrasL
THE “GROWN-UP” DAUGHTER’S DUTY TO HER MOTHER. You can only have one mother; therefore, when her step is growing stair and her m?nd gloomy with forebodings, and you can see that her whota
uci >uua sjaicm la iv jfvui iiiim duty and privilege to attend to her ha !V time l Mother is approaching the aort critical period of her life. The change of life, that is what mother is dreading, and no wonder, for it is full of peril to all but the strongestwomen. There are some special and tenf wearing symptoms from whie» mother suffers, but she will not speak of them to any one. • Help her out; she doesn't know what to do for herself! V 7 Shall I advise you? First, send to ’ / the nearest drugstore and get a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Coa»* pound, and see that mother takes It
regularly, then write to Mrs. ttnkham, ati^vnn, mass., »a uic sjaif toms aud you will receive a prompt reply telling mother what to do for self- In the meantime the Vegetable Compound will make life much eaakv
for her. It tones up the nervous system, invigorates the body, and the ‘•blues'* vanish before it as darkness flees from the sunlight. You can get it at any reliable druggist’s. Mrs. Louis Stkoxg, Harris Hill, ErieCo.,N.Y.,says: “I have been troubled with falling of the womb for years, was advised to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. I took thirteen bottles and received, great benefit. When the time for change of life came I suf- I fered a great deal with faintness and palpitation of the heart. I got one bottle of the Vegetable Com
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! $22.50 | For What? « A Pint dm Ticket from Kan- \ aas Gty and almost all A. T. Ac f S.F.points in Kansas. Oklahoma [ , and Missouri, to California. | When ? At the time of the Christian Endeavor Convention in July. ' By What Route? THE SANTA FE The same rate will aim apply in intermediate points, and hi the reverse direction. | Open to Everybody. [ Send for descriptive books end , detailed information to any agent of the Santo Fe Route, or In tea ' undersigned. l W. J. BLACK, s.p.A..A.T.ks. p.iy. Room 145, 9tk end Jackson Sts., TOPEKA, KAN.
r^OADCV11* DiscorntT; i ■ % V# (^ V» T qaiek rollof ond eoroo 1 •>m>. Sood for book of to»tt»oniol« 1# <1 (rcolwut Frtfc »r.B. klUU’S (OSS, iUm A. N. K.-B 1661 tkHEH WSIT1XC TO ADTIITISnU Oleswitoto that jrea aw the AtTxrrtM■seat Is this »a»or. ♦
