II. II t II, '.'II 1 I " J .1 : ' ? I (H- II" I U , IY II I ,Vi U . I II ,l M . - ' l II ...1 II u M 11 1 11 l . I f; I II I 1 I l YOJL. XXII. GRAHAM; N. CM THURSDAY,M ARCH 26, 1 896. i CAHCER CURED LIFE SAVED By the'Peralttent Us of -C "1 was trouftlod forbears with ore on my knee, which ' several . physicians, who treated me, called a ; cancer, assuring me that nothing could be done to save my life. As a last resort, I was induced to try Ayer'S Sarsaparilla, and, after tak ing a number of bottles,- the sore began to disaiipear and my general health improve. I persisted in this treatment, tmtil the sore was en- i tlrely Lealcd. Since then, I use Ayer's Sarsaparilla occasionally as a tonic and blood-purifier, and,. in 'deed, it seems as though I could not -keep house without It. Mrs, S. A. Fields, Moomfleld, la. The Only World's Fair Sarsaparilla. yer's PIHs Regulate the Liver. PEOFESSIONAr, CARDS. - Attprncy-at-Law, ' Practtcoii In the 8twte n1 FeSeml courts. Ortti-e ovr White. Moore A Co.' rtore. Main Street,,, 'Phone No. ATTORNEY AT LAW - .graham, ; i--:r:-r-- jr.-'cr 3ohk GHAT ByjtUM. W. I. DthuW, J.( BYKUM & BYNUM, Attorneys and Coantwloirs at tiw Practice regularly mancemuntj. lb theconrta t4 Ala. - : , All, if, 4 ly. Dr. Joim E.Stcckard, Jr., DENTIST, BTJBOXGTOX, N. C. Ooofl art of itn f 10 vt i Oflloe on Main Bt. over 1 N, tore. . . . , , r art. Wa ker '"."a Livery, Sale Feed STABLES. W. C.'- MOOEEf Pkop'hv GliAfi AM, K. C. -HackameMall traloa. Oood aliifle or 4ou ble teams, coarse, moderate.. . i-2S-in . I am the North Carolina Agent lor Dr. White's New Hair Grower Trat - ment. the Gree teat Olovrir of the Age. , 'j Jt will permanently cure tailing of . a na 1 . a the hair, dandruff, scaly eruptions, postules, or any-seaip uiseasc. It prevents hair turning gray and restores hair to arifrinnl color, and brings A NEW GROWTH OP Hair On Any BaW He" On tarth. Itis' teBly treatment that wjll pKKluce'ihe, resul'- - , Tealimoniftln and treatise famish ed on application Mr. John M. Coble is my agent at Graham, V a - -. Rcwpectfullr, B. T. LASHLEY; Dec 14H Hw Riw, N.' C. I'riNTTn .IN inn Wleafthi aoaieauaple . tMiw o patent t irotrtTOiirMajthTnar OO- I-tTit Ataeraa, IX OL, tor Ueix UJt fnm aOm. ' Uo yon use fine" fUtionery ? If so, you will find it at Tns Guaxe Straight Oat Dcnftcrat " To the Editor of the Charlotte Obmrron ' . I am niad,4 ami .as life-Ion? Dero ocrat I have a right to he! ' - What would ;the hfinented Fowle do if he were to suddenly appear in Nprth CrtrJinii anil behold the, man he selected to run his campaign now running after everything in creation except the Democratic party? But letidr Smith go.. v Let Mr. Peehles go jf he "Hill, and let Butler continue in. Jus-mad careerjarfdrliere are enough Democrats still lei in this" Stiite to wipe Republicanism. Pop ulism, fusion and all such stuff from the face of the earth forever. The trouble ia, hejTarenot speaking out. Why give upT because Vance and Fred Sarbuck , are dead? "I -wish thev were' here. We need them. J Everybody ktiows that the principles of Democracy are right aiid'oXight to prevail., Car leaders are dead. Some of those livbig are just as ca pable out tney are scared, it is now time they were coming to the front an 1 telling us what to do. If hey intend to sneak "off after the chances of a petty office ' under the combined forces of Butler, Mott & Ca, let them say so. What we want no w ore men who call a spade spade. We have had too much of this tstra Idle business already. We can not aftoru it any looser, i hid is a good year for Democrats who are Democrats from principle." , We want m.en who, are able to meet Boyd, Settle,. Butler and all others of like profession, on the fitunip, look them squarely in the eve and tell . them bv the Eternal God that North Carolina not be turned over to Ihem. Wo all remember too well the dark days and pitiless nights i when carpet-baggers, . Republicans and negroes sat around the capitol and preyed like buzzard upon the vitals of the &tate. It is no time for per sonal differences and petty quarrels among ourselves. ." - What if Cleveland has not been able to a'-complitih everything . We promised for him? , There is a man in my ward to . whom I have not spoken in four years..--' This man w;is put up for city "alderman" by my irty last spring. I wtrrked as hard to elect him as I did for any of my 'friends who wereL running and if my, party were to put him up for Governor this summer I would try. to "elect him or die in the effort All we need this year? a little plain talk and plenty of back-hone. . I like a Democrat like Jno. Card well, a worthy and sturdy fai Gailford, who said he killed his best dog becausche learned that the dog had once belonged to a Vd d Re publican and he was afraid to . trust him." Very truly, J. F. Jordan. Greensboro, ,N. C, March 1C, 96. Why 1900 Will Not Be a Leap Yr 8t, Loots Republic, .The reason why 1900 will not be leap year has been frequently given in this column. If the natural or solar yeai" tlie time in which the earth completes ifc revolution around the sun were exactly 3G5 days and 6 hours the calendar year would be kept exactly right by adding a day every fourth year. But the solar year is.only 35 days, 5 hours, 48 minutes" arid 49". 7 seconds. Thifl difference makes it necessary to omit a leap year at certain long intervals. The rule is that every fourth year is leap year except ccnturial years not exactly divisible by 4Q0.Thus the year 1600 was leap year and the year 2000 will be. : The intervening cen: tnrial years, 1700, 1,8" X) and 1900 car ry only 3G5 days. tiST You should have a county paier. Jnbmhe to The Ui.EAirnL Vrat W. K. rack, vbe frmkea a apcuUr t lipAmr, hae Hbeat doaht uaaiad and car a4 noraraaM tbaa ear lirlor Fhytcimmi hie enecaee ia aaioaiaMflc. Vi have heard M w at m ynre' atandinf larr. tyt- Pe at hie abauti.-te ew, free re er tnOvrmra -Henaf cra4 ttr T. Ol an4 fierca. at-'rm Wa eir'.e pt r -a whir a rare t a4-a bU. V. k. tXUU, t. 4 Ctaf tt, Br Iw Wliy Times Are Hard. . Webetor'a Weekly. , Mr. Brodie I,' Duke, a promi nent Republican, was in Riileigh hist Saturday and gave the News and Observer his views on the cod dition of the . . country We will quote 'Business will hot improve mil Congress , quits cultivating every other country's patch and goes to attending tobusines8 that affects the United States. 1 had a letter had a few '.days ago," said Mr., Duke, ' 'from, a business man of prominence in the North; and he accounted for the present dull, times on the Idea that much war talk in Congress had made capital timid, and had made meri afraid to turn loose their money Mr. Duke thinks if Congress would confine itself to legisla tion affecting tho people of the U, S.,; and quit trying to regulate South America, Venezuela, Cuba,. Snai ii. Hawaii and other countries with which they have nothing to do, there would be abetter chance for good times in manufacturing and in business.' - 7 Mr. Duke is a brother of J. B. Duke, president of the '. Cigarette Trust, one of the most cruel combi- L nations ever formed to rob thes peo ple, He is a' faithful exponent of the class who think the Govern ment exists solely for . their benefit. Agriculture may languish, trusts may' fatten upon the . people, an inhuman war may be .waged right at our door, a weak people struggling to maintain free institu tions may stretch out their hands to us, hut nothing must bo - done. Mr. Duke's confidence might be shaken and tlmtwould bg awfuh, The euuse of humanity is none of our concern away with your Brush. What matters it if England does gobble up Venezuela, or if Spain murders the Cubans by the whole sale? Uncle Sam's business is to see that the esteemed Mr. Duke and the class ho represents do not lose confidence.. ; Oh the hcartlessness of gold ! How it starves the nobler qualities of the heart. Justice and humanity must be sacrificed to keep up cbnfUH dence. Tho devotees of that metal are blind. Their greed has led them , upon dangerous ground. However gorgeous the superstructure may be, it must tumble o ruin when the foundation gives away, Lincoln said the govenment could not stand half slave and half free, and his words are as true now as tJjayLJKers-ttcre(L-Jrhc gold- ites are playing with fire. , Seventy million people do not live for the benefit of a tew ;. gold gamblers alone. The Crystal Was Broken. -- - London TIJ-Bifa. - ' 'I hare been told," said Mr. Du bois, watching tho steam hammer in the rolling mill, that a good hammerman can break the crystal of a watch with that thirty-ton ham mer." "Yes," said the hammerman, "it can be done." "I should like to see it," said Mr, Dubois, eagerly, feeling in his watch pocket. "I can do it, sir," said the man "T."And will you ?" ..queried Mr. Dubois, drawings ont his watch. "Come. I am anxious to see it tried." - - He laid his watch on the great anvil-plate. The hammer rose to its full height and the next instant all its ponderous , weight, with a crushing force which shook the ground for an acre - round, came down on the watch. -Thcre.sir," said tho man, "if you don t believe tnat crystal is broken, jut step'donn and you can see it sticking to the hammer. " Mr. Dubois swallowed . a whole mouthful of lumps and gasped' be fore he could speak. .' ' "But I forgot to ssy," he exclaim ed, "that it was to break the crystal without injnring the watch." "Ob, yea," said the hammerrran. VYes,I know- I hare heard that rubbish myself-" . - ..y Chlldron Cry 3f A 'Ptssuni Story. . -; :; ' She had expressed a desire for a woodcock.- -' -,- ' ; ' '' -: . it was enough. ' He shouldered his gan and took to the. woods, his dog at his heels. " The dog pointed. It was nlt Nix. It was not the door-shutting pointer who' obeyed his master in his sletep and died last week. It was riot the dog tlmLbroughi lightirood in his teeth and suggested that his master make a fire. It was not the dog who prefers his eggs stuffed with pepper. It was not tho rat terrier who Jives on the second floor of the K. of P. hall and nsver barks on Tuesday nights. It was not the red setter who cost his owner $15 a month -in fees to small boys for bringing him home when he runs away. (All these dogs bars been thrown up at ma since I ventured to tell a dog story.) . - However, the dog pointad, and the sportsman beheld, instead tf the coveted woodcock, a 'possum. ' ' Tho 'possum griuned but could not move. .. - , - The sportsman chuckled in spits of his disappointment, and caught the 'possum by the tall. 77 - 'Pomuuis' tails are not pretty, but they make good hendlex. Presently the dogr who was not any of the dogs mentioned to me by men qn . ths - street -corners during the past four days, pointed again.- This time, he pointed a woodcock. The sportsman threw up his gun. Alas I Around the trigger finger coil ed the 'possum's tail. But she wanted a woodcock. The 'possum's tail was . made to pull the trigger, while the 'possum's teeth were tlar4QraortfJ noo and the possum claws caress- 1 his face and the woodcock fell. But ''there's many a slip," and through a rotten bridge slipped ths sportsman and down the stream floated the woodcock. Tho scars and tho ')ossuin ap peased. her, and her smile and a promised possum supper were balm to the swrtsman. Baibcbind the scenes the cook, sin' gwyrio to kill that pnsfum, honey. He sho'do look like my po' dead sister Annie. I can't kill 'im honey," i .' Tlie decree had gons firth. The 'possum skipped aray to his hollow tree, while the 'possum con noisseurs ate roast pig and sweet po tatoes, and didn't know the differ ence. Perhaps you will say this is not a likely story. ' Truth is stranger than fiction. Exchange. Thi Chnrth tnd Vanity Fair. Rer.-X. C. Troy, In X. C. Cbrlataln Advocate. The "fcstibnle." fan drill, cake walk, bazaar, and other kinds of en tainments, may add money to the Church treasury but no- growth in grace and knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ to the participant. have 1 been told that Bro. - Milliard 1 T referred the people who patronize these things to God's word as found in Phil., 3:19. A man who attend ed a festival said h ate five plates of oysters; fortunately for him, the ovsters were not numerous tnd had not reached oldags. The Apos tle says, "Fepne to lire is Christ When Christ is oar life ther OiurtfftS' ,1,7. s now impror ill not have to sue for the people's favor in forma paapcria The weighing of the young sisters was the drawing card of a recent affair to raise money for the poor heathen. The ministers managed the scales as each girl would take her seat in the swing. Tlie masculine portion looked on. The young lady's escort mast pay one cent fof cacb pound registered by his fair-partner. When one g-'rl pulled the beam at 210 pounds yon can imagine the out burst. It meant 12.10 the young man must pay for their supper. This wss done for foreign missions. I am glad to say it was not in North Carolina, but other things are here equally objectionable. - Rotm, 122. If the Church can't succeed with-; out "Vanity-Fair it is best that j it should foil. . Children Crjfor Pitcher' Csstonaw The liwyer and the Bible. 144 I was trying a case 'at .Genera once before ,-Judge Yiispn," said lawyer 'Pat Mcllugh, to the Chicago Inter-Ocean. "The lawyer on the other side, who was a great talker, strongly warned the jury ' of the danger of receiving hearsay evi dence, which he described as often misleading, and unreliable, saying that, no matter how honest wltness f were or inUiulel to b, there wa always a chance of their having mis. understood a man's meaning and language. For example ne quoted or pretended to quota, copiously from the Scriptures, giving the four evangelists' accounts of the crucifix ion, which he described in detail At length ths judge said ; . , ." 'Will you be kind enough to give the references ?' " 'I am quoting from the "5 Holy Bible,' said the lawyer, . " 'Yes, ye,' said the judge,! that's all nght; but we want your references; pa.2P, chapter and verse, if you please.' "And repeated the deninnd. The lawyer turned upon the julgo and myself what was intended to be a look of withering pity and con tempt, and said; " "'May it pleasie the court, I am addressing the jury. If I were ad dressing the court or counsel I might feel it necessary to give reler ences for what I quote; but I . am addressing religious and God-fearing men, who read their Bjbles with care and devotio'n, and who know exactly where to find the quotations I give without having to be helped out by the chapter and verse as if they were unenlightened infidels.' " The judge and myself hung our heads under this scathing re buke, and the jury were so tickled with this flattery of their- Scriptural lore that the lawyer won the case." Exchang. - The Gorerninent's Remne. New Tork Herald, The February returns of the Uni ted States Treasury contain the very gijatifylng intelligence that the government's receipts of revenue during the last month exceeded tlie national expenditure by 1127, Mu, w. J ne total revenue was S2C,059,228.42,and all pcndi tures wt,y4i,6tH. J he revenue derived from customs-duties was 113,908,393.38, which amount is over 50 r cent, of the grand total The figures show that (he amount of customs revenue which the Wil son tariff act is now producing decidedly better than was expected by its critics, and that if any part of that act needs revision for the puf- 1 pose of raising more revenue it is ' . . - .1. . 1 . . iiov io iiiucii ino par containing schedules or antics on imports, as the internal revenue provisions of the act. ... During the fiscal year (be ginning with July last) the receipts frem internal revenueup to Satur day night last were only. $98,732V 619.21, while the cn.toms receipts were IU2,fl2M03"5O. It seems evident, therefore, that the present tariff-rales of duty re not priori! lyschargeablo with the deficit In the government's revenue. The custom receipts last month were $3,101,000 greater than the internal revenue receipts. ing, though slowly, and if Congress will practice economy in its appro priation bills the revenue may rate! up with and more than equal the expenditures of. the government be lore next autumn. 'Redundancy of revenue is sore to breed cx travagance and is a greater evil than a temporary rtennu Jiut tor tne great Ctlling-off in our crops and thel pners of Urm products in ln'Ji and In 1891 the people would now hare the money to import for foreign merchandise much more largely. I With improved harvests next sum mer it is likely that the importa tions, and consequently the customs- revenue as well as Internal revenge, m-ill increase very decidedly.' But in any case, f economy In congres sional appropriations is imperative rtj demanded. " Children Cry for 1 Plt5her, Castorla. . 1 IHltCatatfall jtn&om,mm puna The Rabbit lilked the Cow. Durham Sun. ? This is not a fairy story! ' It is an actual fact, and a eise which dim-1 onstrates the affection found among tho dumb aniuiah". ; , , f Little Miss Katie Thaxton,' daugh ter of Mr.T and llrs. J. J. Thaxton. livi-3 on Kv.iih iiiee5f is the owner of a large pet E.igllaly ralbit. ?: ' ' Mr. ti. E. Ncutiiery, a next - lo? neighbor, is Uo ;osa-or of a fine cow wliio'i glvts ijni . three and a l:a?f io Jonr gallo.is of -.-Ilk a df . For tho past week or two Ibis cow has fali:g o.T in the amounj; of h.-r milk, fceitfpg duvn lctcly io.J.iardly four cu JC anJ it 'coiiMrn'oltpiix ASD BECOXp'pIVISJOjra1 be cccouclcl fu. Thr; e cr To.r clays ago tho causo dawned t: ion iUoiS. a ,,s :: The most i llenso affeciion had spvung i p between the labbU rnd j the cow. 7i:ey we' ecairu.iUi l;y lo- gethor. y' hen not, be cow would low as Is she had lost her cn! It was discovered that tho :abJ)t was doing the ui'iking nt ila oWn sweet willy-and had become, as the sp.j 'g is, "as .-it as a burerDall." Thurcday rekvig lact JcT-1 Nealherv saw them tnce 'her ai.ai thaV cow was -'apidng and s'..okinj the! rabbit with l?f?r:igre just as hoe ' would her ow or-'"- ' 1 - - , aru ooiii .1 1... ,. -J .... .. ,.1 ;iv iui j.jv TOittui - ed, John picked v j the' ra'ibit "to carry it home and when he had got ten off some distance the cow made a break. Sir hioi. 'o tflstur'ilng '.heir happy state ryj reinov1': her "pet, and with he-r" hchd gave' hrai a SfJlUire hck J.t (ho br.'A, Wil'ch took hiinoffim feet a u; knoched il. rabbit out o? his hands, lie was not halt: , r . Si.ice that 'inio, the rabbit has been ie.itianenily lemovcd ami the cow has lesumod her usual quota of milk, but f hove is much lamenta tion 0.1 her ):ui. Nerer Too Late to Learn. . ' Calo, at eighty years of ago, learned the Greek language. -Socrates, at an exli-e-ne ofr! asc, learned to play o a inusical instru mentrf. -'. ; ' ; . ' ' Plutarcli. when between eevenly and eighty, bege.n the study of it in.;: :'.- . . -' , 7 ' v " Doctor Johnson appliwl liimsclf to the Dutch 1an,iige bua few years bi'fore bis ('w-tn. . . - . Fniuklin did r.o. Jully conimpiice his philosophical: pnrsuils t'll - he had reached his fiftieth yearv Ludovico Monaldec, st the great age of huodred and fifteen, wrote the Tmenioiro of his own times, ' - -.-' . '. '-.-.- . Drydon, in his bitty-eighth year, commenced -the tn;iHhit'ii(i of tlie Iliad, liut )leair. pimlucfjoiv Ogiiby, the livnslator 0 Jloni!,f anil Vlri.il ' u--, - ir. ' a.,,., - Latin and G.cck till l.e wls v.t Loconofio.wai thiify-fire years of 4 I of Ifebt. liiirmt ore ; .yet he War... one : the crnpit nmi on .f II. a Tusn dialect, Danto and Pctranh U ing the nil, i t : wo. scicnces in Ins youih, ", but cini- mciM-ed the Wudv of theni who.i lm ' m-m u l..n Ft' r .A m'.' ......... f age. Artcr tins lime lie icaiite a most . learned anlio.ur.an snd lawyer. wecouH-cite thrxisands of es- araplen nl tue 1 w!i-jC tinmened s ne r MUHJV, I" 'I H - UT-lflIlAl ur - J : . . 1. - 1 : .1 ' I i . . : amu ine:ii, at advanced s-rc. - Jiu. evcryj'ie ?ntnil ar wUh-ih-4 iopa phy ofdisti'igui'lied meii. wi!lie- ol!e-t iiv!ividual rases cnongh 'to convinn tlictn that notw but the sick and indolent will ever say. "I am loo old to learn.". , WWiBabrma1dt.(atarCaatana. Wkaa atw vaaa tifld, afce ariaS tar Caatorla. ' WaeaeSabecaaMl3aBcBS(toCfeaiom. 1 TnT-itTmraeliaal Lsaweniai Powers Latasl U. S.GTt Xapart:-J--: '' 73 U V3 t ' Buncombe county has nine iron wniugea, W)ttii (ii,vw, .y'.' t j. : ; :MACH '''i'HL'i i.ti . K f AND ENGINEER, 1 BURLINGTON,- -'-- N..C..': ;- i MACrJiNE,-";:" 4V BLACKSMITH SHOP,! FOTJKDEY; .'..'' GEAB-CTjrTJNO. ; t Pipings; filtingi, valves eta. ; ; Southern Railway.' "" P1EDMOXTA1BLIXB.;- Iu Effect Feb. i IM. I ' tireeaaboro. lUelb and CoKsljoro. NoTif Eiiit Bouad K6.M Ually. Mixed. Iailj. Kln i College... W06pm la , iu .,, IS j"'."- is ' . 4 0 , . . . 4eA ' TO ' ,'' . jti'i'ioitrtju. iiWU no ; 12 17 f'.: 1 it ijr.iuaiii Milll-o.i.. Durham .... .,...., Ar KaleigU lotpmi Tlx. bua. . Lr Pnlelfrh. ... ' ('lllVIOII..... lM)llDJ....4.. Ar flnlrt.boro.... It' Hi tin 4U ODai II w , 100 pi K. if. Mlz4 Dally. Weii Bourd Dally. ArOrreiujIxrou..;. i :ion coiioh... TMpni; 1 00am , ., M . U j m . 4 at s- IM ' to Mixed " I urlinirluii...... a w . I SS It IM 111. 6116 it r untnaiu... Hlli.lH.ro..... riitfei-nitjr -., I)nr1mm..... Vf. Balc-iga. Ex. Bud. Ar nalrtgh... -, i'laylou elma lOOpBi TI0 ' ; w - - v IS"' Xv Oold.boro.. alii mrte ctoe conneetloa ' t,vul --i THbOCGH SCUEOr-LB. Bontb nto j So." rt. ! D..UV. ( No. in, Lv tVaM.tii Cnrr.Oo',lle )l 15 s-hi. 10 ' p m JflUil tfOUItMn. I.r icinnr. lh"iiviik.... Ar (i enahnra liAm m IM US 740 oa tu TUaat Warn lUsam I I'm 1 lis u m 4 13 3 Jt: I1U IS am ;h s I" WI!a',iiMii op m 1 ! lit. a. tkdl'lHIl T l.r Aa-. )' At Hat Kmixtlile C'uiU..Ki, J 11 iii,e (Vilum'jl.. Aiu,m,i... (Cen ml T.uio) J.ukMiovi'ia. l ioaatl ia fc l' iUluol iml I to n hi' in a. l-.U)pu WK . 1 w , i 5uaa so 4 '.a feiilxiil. K.u.lwiu..-. Korth Ko. C4 I Ii I i-r. j 1 no. n. aliy. I At Wfl.iifnvl.in l'lini-fit'avljlu I2l on 16 J.viicbhai. T)inllle.. 1V Clrfiriilowi ini 108 119 . r.ifm! 104a. m iraiei-a SalUliiirjr , AahevlMe Hih Sjilr,a Konx.lfla... n on a nil aci p 4i 140 RU I ID a as in ... r.tatinnooyaJ Mam' Colur.iiiia .. tut tlOD rtuaoia... SAvannab.. (Oxtral T;ni" Jackvtnrliie 1 in ' wot a II I I' , 3 1 its . a at . ht. AiKuiate All hr Jilrmliftaiui J 61'iAam uupm 1 w CIPI..U) . K. Orleena... Woe. CJ fjM a, ' Wi.,' nrton km! ttt. 'ea eulr'y o' puii V ZrX? I V, "j""1 '.,','""'' wafc..ii )m HA. ' m a. I VS V . . ear . a. . t,T TO " a.. t,:.:. r.-"" ano ft. . - - . -v , F, na rv. ri,.ir . Uoip. .1nie.1t aal t j IV.. , I iru. tl. m aiMH.Irs C Hi I. !w Mrfnj.t.m Hi fit. Aajwaiina. - 1 .rx.. A ur,. leriMl .a-j..arl miv Yo- luAi..,o."a. 5or;.H-aa. u. a. r-t . r-niw J v V. a. ivi-a . mw mZZ m.'m.Z . 1 ' - ' -:4 '. moil Clcjm.rtl. , ' Thrnw,s .ietwia on'aale at prt-K-cl era-.'' woiyfP4rtof taeeuipt.iy.or to Manaer,arn. liiT.l. Waa! J.u-vm. n . . Crmm. aM Twta-liark. .iiiaa. aa4 al rak aoaaafc ear m.iii nta. eat w (aa amo aa .ar... ia aaa baw km km! V b. .. .- aw. If MMi;f4.i m fm at OW Vt n t-m e 1 mmi h mtw 'liiti,, ),ii,. CM P'fM'l ". -,