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PUBLISHED EERY HFTERNOON EXCEPT' SUNDRY VOL. V. NO.231. KINSTON, N. O, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 31, 1002. DDT mTTTrt iti fc Travel Little Creatures About Our Homes tr LE ROY WELD X Honey Makers and Their Kindred. At7HE order hrmenoptera. or mem 1 1 Trane winged insects, includes IX the most Intelligent ot all the class trisect. - Although there are more than 20,000 species included in tbla order, we shall speak of but verr few of the best known. The ant. the most intelligent of all, has been . irlirsn aonarata article. The hnttevbee -.' . . is probably the best known and the most useful Some moderately ' warm day; about 10 a. m, place a few drops of honey on a clean blue dish, as bees are attracted most by that jcolor,' and carry it near the hive.? Some bee will find your honey in a short time and fill : ber crop. She will then fly away to the ' ' bite, but will return for more honey as soon as she has deposited ber first supply in the comb. She will make a trip every fifteen or twenty minutes; and you will have plenty of time to study her and other bees which may ' find the honey through her assistance. ' There is little danger of being stung. Bees seldom sting those who feed them. . They soon learn ' to know you, and .- when! they find that you Intend no harm you are safe from their stings. " The worker, or undeveloped female. the only bee which leaves the hive to search of food, and, other necessaries. has four transparent wings, with no wing covers, as in beetles. The front pair of wings is the larger, and all of them move with great rapidity in flight 190 times a second. The eyes are large and compound, being composed .of a great number of simple eyes, but these composite eyes seem to be fitted for long vision only, .- When laden with material for the hive, they fly with great rapidity In a straight line toward home; hence the eaylug "straight as af,bee, line,1' jAt the hivej however, they are obliged to reel their way in. 'Jl wo jointed anten nae, or feelers, project from the, head. These ueem to guide' thein about the" hive, and some writers claim that they communicate with , each other . by means .. of , these . appendages. The body is ' made up . of three distinct . parts, bead, thorax and abdomen. Two pairs' of Wings and i three pairs Of ' legs are attached to the thorax, while the abdomen has no appendages. In the middle portion of the hind legs Is a nearly triangular cavity, surrounded by thickly Bet stiff hairs, forming a rial Is carried. The ends-of the feet are supplied with little hooks. The other four feet 'Tare-' furnished with little hair-brushes ' used in collecting pollen, etc., . and the end of the ab domen is armed with a sting. The males have no sting, The mouth has a tonguelike proboscis for lapping Jip the nectar of flowers.. The bee has : two stomach, the Drat Mne'a tort of crop in which the honey undergoes .a chemical ' change hot well under stood. 'Digestion takes place In the r second stomach. '". '.' " In a swarm there are three classes of bees males, females; and workers. The workers were formerly known as neuters, but they are now known to be undeveloped .females. There Is but one perfect female lh a swarm, and she is called the queen The number dreds to 40,000. -Toe number ot insles is usually one to about, thirty work ers daring the fore part of the. sum. mer. Lat-r every male Is either driven out of t! 4 hive or killed. - The queen, tay a all of the eggs and ts freque&ny the mother of nearly all of the sWarm. ; She le much " largtr than the workers and somewhat longer than the males or drones. The arones do no work, but are cared lor by the workers...- They have, no use but to perpetuate the species. The workers clean out the hive, collect the food and other material, feed and nurse the yonns. build the comb, stock the hire with honey, ventilate the hive, guard against intruders, fight nil the bat ties and do everything that Is done about their well ordered home. Upon entorins a new hive the bees carefully examine its interior, and If any cracks ere foun-1 they teeiire ma terial for -eniei;tI:'. Willi's n 1 i?;arau ' kr ; t t. Th" iv,.; k I '-i (ft' r f " r t' ; i ; If :i I 't ! i a .s ' them so that cold is-sects ma v In: J 1 I CO ! " ' 1 vsri.- s ; ' : ' I !'.'.! ev. ry .'.'. ' f - ana haiigm-ae rme TraT. mro on until a cluster of bees is formed some times weighing three or four pounds. Here they -remain for ; about twenty four hours, ,when the wax begins to ooze out from under the scales be tween the segments of the abdomen. One bee detaches herself from the cluster, climbs to the top of the blve, turns herself around several times to crowd the bees out of the way and be gins to pick the wax off her abdomen and. form It into a little lump. An other bee soon takes ber place, then another and another until a large, thin plate of wax bangs where the bees were. Cells for brood and honey are next begun on both sides of this plate. few bees are detailed to feed, and care for the Queen. A fewxmore ven tilate the hive by ' fixing themselves with their heads toward and near the entrance and moving their wings as In flight In this manner they create a current of pure air throughout the hive. Still another detachment Is en gaged in guarding the entrance against marauders. . When the bees have finished a large brood comb, the queen begins to lay eggs at the rate of about "200 a day, placing one egg in each celL All these eggs will produce worker. After con tinuing this process for about a month or six weeks she begins to lay male eggs In the larger cells, stopping once in two or three days to place a female egg In one of the royal cells. If from any cause the queen should be re moved from the hive when there are no eggs or larva? In the royal cells, the bees at once enlarge a worker cell and feed the larva on royal jelly Instead of the pollen:, ' etc., given to the worker larva?. The larva develops into a queen. and the life of the colony is again In- sored. ; Should there be no worker eggs or very young larvae In the comb the bees become distracted, quit work, wander about aimlessly and soon die or are destroyed by their enemies. If things move on normally,, the first' egg placed In a royal cell is batched, passes through the larval and pupal stages and becomes fully developed and ready for liberation in sixteen days. The old queen then becomes restless and wan ders about in search of the young prin cess.; The bees stand guard over her and close up the cell so that she can not "escape,- They keep the old queen away from the royal cells or her sting would soon put an end t ail ttfe there. On the first fine day ' the old queen. with a large number of the bees, leaves the hive and seeks a new home. The young queen is now allowed to come forth' from her cell, and if the swarm Is too weak to send off another swarm Bhe is allowed to kill the remaining princesses in their cells. After a few days she leaves the hive and, Vlth the drones, takes a flight In the air, return ing in about half an hour to repeat the life of her mother. ' The common bumblebee is also social in its habits, but the number In a sin gle colony Is very small, usually from tento thirty.; Their mission seems to be to carry pollen from male to female flowers like, their more aristocratic ilns, the honeybees, Their nests are built in the ground, and all drones and workers die In the fall. 6nly the queen hibernating or living over to the following season. There may be more than one queen In a colony. .-. There are several species of solitary bees. . These . bees are of but two classes, males and females, the latter doing all the work. The female con structs from one to a dozen cells, ac cording to the species, in earth, clay 'or wood, and deposits in each an egg ana a suppiy or poiien ana sometimes a little honey for food for the grub. ' There are two groups of wasps, the solitary and the social. ; Ot the so--clal - group the common , hornet Is S good example. The social wasps live in colonies of. from 100 to 600. mem bers and consist of males, females and workers, as do the bees. The fe males and workers all Lave powerful BV which they use on the least provocation. - Ail, except a few yoorj queens, die on the approach of winter. Each of these queens constructs a few cells in the spring and lays an egg hi each. These soon hatch, and the mother supplies them with food. They are ail workers, and When mature re lieve the queen mother of further labor. Additional broods Increase the number rapidly. The males and per feet females are not hatched until late In the season. Some species build their nests In the ground, others on the branches of trees or the timbers of buildings. The nests of the tree wasps are very inseoiously built of pulp made from wood resembling paper. Copyright, 'SO?, by Lewis D. Sampson.) Drag; Their Fablea. The habit of dru;- Aug their babies fo .Mt they can le left clone Is very coin- i;; 'i In inilui anioiis mclhers who work ' ' Hit s. In the city of Madras th. f mortality is given as 2: 5 I '.r in 4 I ? I Itm. t M ,i f . 1 1 CHOICE MISCELLANY : 1 -'.;v . 'i : ; ;-, ;'--- : " coat mt EaglaaaVs Wars. ' If we coasider total expenditure, the South African war Is the moat expen sive war that England has ever waged, with the s'lgle exception of the twenty-three years' war with France (17U3 1815), the .rreat cost of which waa nearly four times that of the South Af rican war. .?' The Boer war, however,. wiO have cost over twice as much as the war with the American colonies, two and a half times as much as tu Seven Tears' war, more than Khxvr times the cost of the Crimean war acd from four to fifty times that of any of the other wars. Taking the duration of the wars into consideration, the South African war Is by far the most costly war that Great Britain has ever been engaged In. The average annual cost of the Boer war la over f53. 000.000. The war with France (1793 1815) cost 30,150,000 per - year, or about & per cent of the annual cost of the South African war; the Crimean war cost about 35,000,000, or 65 per cent; the 8evea Years' war and the raa wfH rh imosHMii tfwiltlfcm Mitrf each less than 20 per cent, and no oth er wsr has come up to one-tenth of the average annual cost of the South Af rlcan " war. "Annals of American Academy." " ' ' . , .. .. The Paper' mt Toatajr, Only paper of the very best quality is now made from rags, the bulk of that employetl for newspaper and book L work being manufactured from ,wood( puip. uiner maieruus are aiso coming into use to meet the enormous demand for; paper, and plants "which were at one time supposed to be of no economy to Importance are contributing their fiber to the manufacture. Among the new materials mar be named bagasse. the refuse of the sugar mills, formerly a waste product 'save that it was em ployed for fuel Rice straw, long only used as bedding for cattle, is also en: listed In the service of the paper maker. " In the meantime protests are being raised against the, quality, of the. paper made from these, substitutes for rags. It answers the purpose of -ephemeral literature, but there Is good reason to believe that it rapidly deteriorates and that books made of It will have but a short life. It is somewhat humiliating for us to haysJ acknowledge, tat . pur. modern' documents cannot compare m permanence with those written ion Egyptian papyrus before our own historical- period began. Chambers' Jour Stationed off the Island of Islay, on the, west coast of Scotland, at the Ot ter rock, there Is an Interesting and novel lightship, which is described in Cassell's Magazine.' - It is unmanned, yet it. can be relied on to display the . warning Jight to guide the mariner on this dangerous coast. ' It is a very .; ingeniously con structed vesse and the only one of Its Kina in existence, in its two steal tanks sufficient gas can be stored to supply the vessel for several months. Kxperiments have, shown that the tight may be depended upon , to burn continuously for months at a time. The approximate duration of the light can always be predetermined, and there I no danger whatever of the light being extinguished either by' wind or spray. The light is visible at a distance of eight to. twelve miles.-. The lightship also has a bell .which is made, ring automatically by; means of an,. lugcni ous device, which utilizes the gas as It passes from the tanks to tbe lantern to work the bell clapper., The light Is not Interfered with In the slightest degree toy the netice for striking the belt V tlerr' Pohl, president ef the German Society For the Protection of Chta, has just published the results of his laves ligation in regard to the age which It Is possible for these animals to attain Cuts, be says, are like human beings In one respect.. The more peaceful and better regulated their life is the longer they are likMy to liver As a proof he points out that a faxorite cat lu the royal castle of Xymphenburg has lived to be forty-two years old and conse quently nif y fitirly cl.-itui to be consid ered the dean of cats in Germany. ,. , That this remarkable animal ha? still some youth In her Is evident fmw thr fact that she pave birth to a kltt.n two years aso. Moreover, the kitten ihrived wonderfully and attracted much atten tion when It was exhibited at the ex position in ISrcslan. . i lah Deetrer Lotas Beds. The beautiful COTtfan lotu hofls which for the past quarter of n a n turr have lined the extreme westerly shores of Lake Trie from Monroe, Mich., to Point Place are threatens! with coo) It te annihilation by fish, says tbe Cku-immtl Pnquircr. At the rr--er.t rate cf d:--tructkin. which ban l-e ' a !- r on fr the ra.-t five v; :;rs. It U sr.! I I y g-il author!" s that n. a f .- - ! 1 w i;l tx' t i i tb'-i 1 c -y v- ; ' I ; f THJE BELLS OF MXKTEEN-TWO. Wriliu for Th Fra Pran. Th whaelf of Tin n rolling round, , -. t ' . Ring tat Um old, ring la 0a Bavj . , Wa Imoat fao! lh nigbqr boand That takaa from a oor Ninataan-twa, -. t . Daar Bell, that ring to svatt and low,: . King oat tha Id, nil g in h o i - 8rrika hig, acd break tha cloodt o' n,a. That thadoaicd hear i i- Ninctaan-two. Scad k to hoowe arl.h biokea tiaa, i, Ring out tba old, ring in tha aaar; , , : . Lift op tba haart of bittar nlgb,. KugUadartonaalorNiMtaaa-two. . , To ary lia nick, sorrowing soul, Ring oat tba old, ring in tba aewf Nw kfa, by Jtui' blood mada who a, ' Sing oat tba dark of Ninataea-two. 3 aa God of lova, who bolda tba kay. - ' ' Ring oat tbe old, ring in tba near; , V . H cU for kelp in Nineteen-duva - To aave tha lost of Nineteen Jwo. S , . , Mas. B. W. Hatc. Rqrctoa, N. Dac 3, lona. -ALXWA1T8 OK CASTRO. The Cabinet DUteaiaoa the Questloatef the Beat Wsjrof TaraalBstlag U Bloekado, WavAtogtolyPw ' w V5 h" f1"6' Proposal to . ' titrate the Venezuelan troubes has not Uen received, la fact Seeretary Hay had nothmgof importance on the Tens- suelan altnatlon to communicate to, the eablost. There are, however, under die euss on such qnrsttons as those relating to the best means of terminating the blockade and other matters touching the personnel of the commlesio.n, which Is expected will meet In Washington to lay d'iwa the lines of the arbitration ehem. ' Caracas, Dec. 80. Pnsident Castro ar il ved here this morning. At 3 o'clock this afternoon Minister Bo wen called upon - the president and communicated the recommendation that the issues be tween Tent tuela and the allies be taken Into the flonrt at The Hague. Venewela's answer win oe receiveo tomorrow wi a. m. - , . .. "it The victory gamea Dy tns governmeni at uaiqulslmeto argues lor rresiaeni Castro's contlnu .be in power. Tobacco Grower's Ore nlee Ag-ninat The ' :i-i-;5vf'7 Trusts " exmgtonV lCy.i Dee. "30 The State GiecntiTs Commission of the Kentucky T .bacco Grower's Association met here tonight and appointed a" committee to irafc articles of Incorporation for ap proval at tbe next meeting at Louisville, January 29. This association propose to fight the so called tobacco trust, buy- ing the leal irom tne gro wer. . wtore in- corpc rauon is is neceseary tu lorcj m - i ,1.. m A- thousand growers become membere. It was stated tonight that this number onld be signers before the mtetlng Jan uary 23' prgan'iatlons hare been formed in almost every county in the 8tate and in many counties of Ohio and Indiana, 1 be assc elation ts a tri-State affair and pertains to the Whits Burly district. Th Capital stock will be $1 000,000. Moody Claim a Fair Count Gives Him , - SOO Majority. . Asheville, N. C , Deo. 30. Congress djmj Moody Is here in couferoe with his at torneys and others relative to biscontest ith Mr. Gudger. Be asserts that when tie returns of the recent election are properly re-anjunted - and counted by fair tribunal it will be shown that he has a majority of 800 over his opponent. His I assertion, that n BUt mors precinct the J registration waa In flagrant vlolatien of I law ahd tbat tbe registration and poll I books have been lost, destroyed or stolen, I has excited peculiar Interest from tbs fact that Clltraore Is a part of theueorgel Tanderbilt estate and that moat of tbe I estate employes a en t there to east tbsir I ballots. Chaa. iliNamee, Mr. Tender-1 bllt's manager, was among the very active Republican workers at Biltmore. " FeatareS of the Centarr Cowlecs butter, motherleM chickens. horseleee carriages And bloooless sur gery. -:- ' ;.,:;;..;-'; What Coart Dress Is. Full onrt divss" consists In V.nz Inr.d tf either a black velvet sui, wl.;. knee breeches or a plum colomj suit with trousers. Both cost u an n ,;r of modern invention, supers, utiw th" dapi)ed coittn of many i-cloix aiii i.m., niiaoiilered W'lilsrcoats. ai.J art" uu.j tcrestina if lnolfeiisive. - ' Mana Cb.-:na. the j.i-eat charter of Liiclishiiiou's liberties, is pr-w red in the Priti.sh mu.-4'iiiu. It is somewhat staiiied by time, but Kin John's mai and name are still Quite legible at thf bottom of it (Jurtr rhoirk Oraaaaeat. . ;- r cburth ornament is a fi.l.IIf v vi uherccH k' wLich swln;.rs le ' 1 i V.rvnt C.:-,"T J tl.yrt-L "I. '.::;-l. Tbe cl.-.:rci i ':'t i f a f 1 ;, r w ! j eri.'i-riitts' - i I - ' . I f A c; 1 I IN DARK MY8TKHY. Tha Corpse of PolleeaaM Bors Found , - After Eight YTeeks Xliaappeereiicw. Durham, N, C, Dee, 80. Nswt resv.bed here tonight that the remains of Jut. Rogers, s polleemKD, who disappeared from his borne at Vinalm, on tbe Nor (oik and Western road, some eight weeks ago, were found near that station on Saturday by a party of hunters. Tbe body waa so bad y deoomposed that recognition : was only possible by the weapons and clothes of the deceased The story told me tonight is that about sight weeks ago a negro was killed la Vlrgilina. His body was found next moretng and with the finding of the body officer John Rogers disappeared. It was generally supposed that Rogers killed him. j Rogers had money In tha bank and it was found that thii had beta taken from deposit. , ' Later, members of his family received letter stating that Rogers had gone to Ashe Tills and that he - would not write again, and tor them not , to - be soeasy prevented any uneasineM oa the part of the family nntll the dead body was found Saturday by hunters. The supposition la that ,: Rogers killed the nogro, drew out bis money and attempt ed to get out of the country, but that be was run down by the friends of the dead negro, killed .and , then robbed. Tbe same authority makes thsstatementthat Rogers was engaged, to a well-known young lady In this community. The whole matter Is wrapped In mystery, The story ts told by a prominent citl sen living in that section. It Is impossi ble to verify tonight on account of there being no telegraph ewe -lions after dark. A Thirteen Cent Mtamp. The thirteen cent sUinp is not only nw In duaiff i, hot is m.a MTlltD 'lla. nini,nfttOD, neretofoie thf tifditlonal i Bn!ocky tWrt(,B bM n jp b, 1 rTnoU flam lint nnar ft la AamaA fipftnnm- a have a baker' Forelirn ostane almost demand Mdic. Ia tnpat in order to secure proper amoout for fnign postage (5 rentx) aud regiitrtl o (8 cents), It fe qijired .mors than , tn HtHnp on an en Telope or package. Two stamps,; the five and the eight, or the tbree.aod the, ten, .were the Wast. that, could be used nut now only the new lus is all that is uecessary; The thfcen cent stamp ts smaller than" the twn nud is of a brownish color. It k.-,- th ntctme of the lata ei P-e.hient rtenUmln Harrison I . . Death to Typhoid. Germs. f hlcagOi Dee. 29. That lemon Juice will destroy tbe typhoid germs In water anthorattv-lv- annonniwd h thav CM. ago health pertinent, after careful ex pertments extending over the last three Uvs. One te. spoonful of the Juice to half a la sful of water ts known to be a good -omblnation, and repeated trials have mvanahlv nrodnced the same rssnlb very germ was killed. , , ' Toe Investigations followed and. their results confirm the announcement made on Christmas Day by Dr. Aa Ferguson, a London physician, to the effect that I lemon juice was a deadly foe to typhoid. ' t The Tedder Ajreo MsUer. Raleigh, lee, 39.Commlslonsr Willis, of Charleston, 8. C, .Mr. BaylusCade, ol way Derviiie, and ur. Isler, of Goldsboro, ae here examining the records regarding Tedder Ayree uvndt In this State. ;Thsse lands are tn Jones eounty. - The commie- elonets were apppinSM by tba govern- msnt to eondoct tbe sale tor the State, and ths Teddtr Ay res heirs, as there has fisen contest regarding theat lands. U. AaMt the Texas Fever. ' .- Washington, Dec 30. The secretary of agriculture has Issued the annual or ders quarantining against a number of wir Item and western states on account of the southern or Tekas fever. The i!tra? tine against Texas andOklaheni. U ma le a month earlier, this year taking -ff t-t January 1. but it Is not operative a vat nut tbe Other states until February 1. Except in this renpect tbe provlslont- oi l ie oraer are laeniieai witn rnat in previous years. The pn-scrtbed territr Includes Arkansa, Tennessee, Tirginia and all south of them. Sberiar Ooated From Office. Salllvan. Ind., Dec. 29-Gov. Durhln has notified ber!,3 John S. Dudley tbat be to no longer to consider himself a public of floer becarjse he permitted a mob to taW a prior!r from fclm and lynch him. Diiuybas announced bis determina- t! an t o contest the const'tntianality of the ettc . An;t' (- ;i fyrrp r'. -ixr,t ' OLD HORTH STATE HEWS AMD GOSSIP ODD AID IITEEESTKS HiPPEIUSS. Clipped ud Maslisd Froa Ccr Korti CaroIlM Exciias&s. ' , Judge Robert B. Peeblea first court atlll K t W IT i'?w uaauTir county tnt first Monday of the new year. Tbe term Will te for the trial of criminal. - Raleigh Nsws-Obeerver: The State treasurer Is busy thee days cashing pen sion warrants, at the rate of ten to fifteen thousand dollars a day. It ts thought that all will be In by Janiary 15th. Raleigh Post: During the month of Dsrember over 100 applications for land grants hare been filed In the office of tha secretary of stats. These corns mostly from the mountain counties of tbs Bute. A tannte acid factory and tannery will soon be erected at Brevard. The corn pany has purchased '9,000 acres of tim bered mountain land, and sxpsct to nee 10,000 cords of oak wood per year la their operations. Tarboro Southerner At Plnetoptwo shooting affrays occurred, one Saturday and ths other Monday.; In the fight, one colored man was shot through the noes and another tn the head. In the second, ons waa shot twice or more In tbe month and once In tbe chest, and so seriously wounded tbat it ts believed he will die. Both parties to this, second affray wsr colored. - - A special from Newton, 30th says: Last night, the young child of W. E. Houser, colored, a brick manufacturer, was accidentally killed. The child wee about firs years old and had been given a toy pistol which fired shot. It placed the pistol near td one eve and flmrl it Tbe shot passed throogh the eye and penetrated the brain, causing death. The pistol was fired by com pressed air or a spring and was not considered especial J ly dangerous.'1 ' , " - t , i Ashefills special to Raleigh Pot: Nwa reached ; hero Tnearla. fm Dni.- Mountain tbat Rufus Jones Is In a: dying condition as a result of stab 'wounds "re ceived at ths hands of "Mont" Duncan.' Jones and Mont Duncan got Into a fight Christmas day at tbelr homes, Jones . was struck by Dnncan abovs the left ear. with a knife. The blade penetrated hie head and broke off and remained In the m w's skull until Monday evening when It was removed by Dr.. Way of Waynes, vlile, and the skull trepanned." Dunear has not been arrested. Elisabeth City Tar Heel: - Mr. ft' B. Brock, of Powell's Point, Currituck county, was a caller this week. Mr- Brock, who is a prominent merchant, en tertained us highly on the greatness of ' the wild goose country. He said that one man, in three, recently killed over one hundred dollars worth of wild ducks. This, of courre, was exceptional, but Mr. Brock says tbat the gunning Industry of Currituck la a source of Immense revenue. Sometimes there Is rarely a minute In the day bat that one can bear the report 6f one or mors guns, which sound le like distant cannonading on a battlefield. : fiol-isboro Argus. 29: Jonas Wilson. white man living tn the BuekSwanpsee-' t'oa of this eounty, come to ths eity thla morning with bis Mt arm in a sling to . stand trial tn twa cases fir aesault with) dsadly weapon.; It seen th-i TTlIaea got somewhat rowdy about 'v utlstmaa and had some trouble with his v! and bis nephew, George Carrie, both-of whom had secured warrants for Wilson. When be appeared for trial this morning hie . accusers were not present and he told Jostles Broadburst about shooting ; scrape which took place on Friday night. n utwa rain cna ne rearsa as usual at home on Friday night and that he was nr., , m At . . . awakened during ths nigbt by some one ' knocking at his door. Els got up and , went to ths door and was met by a vol ley from a shot gun. The whole loadol but took effect iahis leftfore-arm, which was badly lacerated. A Good Thing-. German Syrup Is the special Drescrfo- lon of lr. A. Bosehce. a celebrated Ger man physician, and is acknowledged to he one f the most fortunate dif-eovert medu-int. It qaictly cures Cor Vs. Vlds and all Luna: troubles of t' r vr- t natnrp, removlnsr, as ltdoee,ther.v,!s I the sii.ction and h-avirt tberarM ia strocjr and healthy c .' It i nut an experimental tr;eJ ' ' , i"t I toodtbe t ft of ye r'i n laevpry r -, w i ' i I 4 i t ; . rp-i--f).,-tT-"a-ftf01 r:-! ' I i : t i ". c r - ' ; " t : i t-'. : i r . ' ' ' ' - -. . if -in vs I v, ". -oai-ona-ii. I : andrr-- ' - b Tl " ! lv I" !!'.! T I ,' i ' a x-- -i-I y V.'U' r' r , O r t . , J v- t;,b '. " - T t ' 1 X i
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Dec. 31, 1902, edition 1
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