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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1888-11-09, Page 3e XING" TILE COFFEE. s' AN INFERIOR PRODUCT POLISH W TO DECEIVE EVEN EXPERTS, The Aaln.iteratiott of the Popular i3errrw. Dusineas According to a Chicago Dealer -Tire Process of Coffee. Mocha. Th° adulteration of coffee is an evil, of so widespread aper well recognized a kind that it leading grocer of this city recout}y had a two column "ad" in the paper set- ting forth the peculiar methods anlployod • and the differeuces existing between vari' • ous growths of coffee. This dealer was seem the other day byea reporter, to whom ho said:' "Tho adulteration of coffee is .a • business, and a largo one at that. There exist, under various names, in Now York, • Philadelphia a#d Balennere, firms who .do • a flourishing business' in this line. "Tho work the do—and aro paid:.for handsomely—is the cleaning, scouring, polishing and coloring of; rho natural bean, It must not be supposed, howovor, that•tlhia is all clone with the knowledge • and connivance of tiro retail+or wholesale grocers by whom tho coffee cis afterward sold to the consumer. Not at all. Prat- - ably frilly GO per cent. of •these grocers ignorantly buy what they suppose to be 'Java" 'Mocha,' •and other- high priced '• coffee, whoa in reality they got inferior •. grades. You see, it is a dimoult thing to " dote:mino exactly the quality of coffee in • the bean. Thorn is, in poiut" of fact, no •• sire test to bo employed, in sampling cof- fees but the ono of taking the beau coffee, roasting it, and making a liquor of it, which is drunk. That is the only roliablo test. What can bo learned about coffee would i i reality fill a book; and it takes yeaand good opportunities to become a ., years and !'Now, what would you take this coffee to be?" and the expert handed over two small vessels of roasted coffee, showing beaus of handsome shape, uniform iu • size and pungent of odor. "That is Buca- manngo and tho other Bogota. Now, • did you ever hoar of such coffee or such . places before? And yet this is very good Central American coffee, apt to bo mis- taken. for Java by even pretty good judges. And what do you suppose :this is?" Ile showed another small vessel.full of unroasted coffee. Tho berries were of all shapes, flat and., almost globular, some four times as large as others. But this " .coffee, though not roasted, exhaled a pow- erful fragrance, reminding one a little of vanilla. "This is genuine Mocha, dam - pled and bought by myself at Aden, Ara- bia. They say there is more so called lifocha. sold hero in Chicago than • the ' whole crop of real Mocha coffee amounts to. It may be so." "And how about the real process of .,adulteration?" "It isn't called so. It's termed 'fixing or 'dressing' in the trade. It gulls deal- • ors as well as the public. I'll give you a few samples of how it works. Real Java • comes, for instance, in flattish woven mats. On tho trip across tho wenn moist beans generate damp .heat. •It . gives the statural greenish tint of the' berry a . tinge toward tho pillow and brown. It also swells the size of the berry. To imitate Java, Macaratbo, • Guatemala and Santos is used—all Amer'. • eau coffees. When subjected to a sweat- ing process they begin to look more or • lees like Java, so much so as to deceive even dealers who do net take the trouble to test coffee by malting a sampletliquor of it. Yet tho difference i)1 prico is eight •cents a pound, or 83 per cent. . Take ." Guatemala coffee. That is ea oxoollont kind, handsome to look at and pleasant to taste. But much of what is sold ruder tho name is nothing but Costa Rita, or Rio. A polishing machine will in a few hours give those rho bluish tint and the glossy appearance of genuine Guatemala.. Soapstone and Prussian bino are used in '• coloring. Of Rio thorn is more imported than of all otherkinds of coffee—probably ten times as much. There are all kinds • of Rio coffee. Some is exquisite, as fine • in flavor as almost any coffee. Some aro very poor. The small -Brazilian farmers ' will spread and euro their raw coffoo.,right " on tho pampas. In drying, tho berry will • absorb the flavor of the manure sodden • earth, and such coffee will be, of coalrse, bad in taste. But you can't toll it: half the time until you roast the berry and boil' your coffee." A local firm which the dealer referred to as "fixing" the coffee has a warehouse that is crammed from cellar to roof with sacks of coffee and with machinery. to ' "fix" it. They evidently »do a very good . trade. The superintendent was watching the loading of a cargo of several hundred sacks of coffee consigned to a popular:mill in town. Ile was not averse to giviAg ' fowpoints of information regarding.tho business in which his house Is engaged. "Nino -tenths of our work," he saill,'con- lists in 'milling' coffee. That is another name for 'polishing.' The machines used Sn the business are plain, horizontal ety1- finders and centrifugals. If coffee is very dry and husky we use a little pure water, about one gill to the bag, so as to give it thee, clean and smooth appearance. The Polishing', is done to smooth the berry that's all. "Whether dealers afterward sell this coffee, improved in looks, Jot higher grade than it actually is, is a mat- ter with which we have nothing to .do. We are just paid by the mills and largo dealers for cleaning and polishing coffee— that ends it as far as we aro concerned. What wo aro doing here, however, is ti thing which has boon done in Germany for over a hundred years. Tho polishing le done simply by attrition« No bluing or tEoapstono is used nowadays --at least not tench. No, sir, tho bulk of the coffee adulteration, properly speaking, is done, not in this country, but before it reaches here, Take Mocha as an example. 'i'ho dealers in Aden buy up other kinds of coffee -"-Malabar and Ceylon and others-. 'which reeemblo the genuine article in up. pearance. Than they mix with real Mocha, tool the precinct is then sent all - weer the world as Aloeben Thus, yon see, • to a !natter of tact, no gentiino Mocha ex- ists in the trade, not if you were to your agent i.t Aden iteelf to b:ty a ,your Im. at.id, ' THE LESSON. OF THE 1 -EAVES, Oh thou who bearrst on thy thoughtful face The wearied Calm that follows after grief. See how the autumu guides each loosened lee! To sure repose iu its own sheltered place. Ah, not forever whirl they in the race Of wild forlarnaess round the gathered sheaf, Or, hurrying onward in s rapture brief, Spin o'er the moorlands Into trackless space! Some hollow captures each; some sheltering wall Arrests the wanderer on its aimless way; The autumn's pensive beauty needs tbem•ol1, And winter finds, thein warm, though sere and gray, Thearse young blossoms for the spring's sweet cult, And shield uew leaflets for the burst of May. -Thomas Wentworth Higginson in The Century. Nevada Minors Dyed Green. A contract bas been let on the Martie White mine, at Ward, Nev., and work is to be resumed forthwith. A queer phe- nomenon is connected with the working of the Martin White ore. The ore is very baso, and. it is necessary to roast the. whole of -it. During the roasting process no deleterious or disagreeable fumes are observable, yet the hair and the beards of all tho.meu engaged about the works aro soon dyed a bright and permanent green. Even the eyebrows of the workmen are as green t:as grass. In scores. of Nevada mines+,ores of various kinds aro smelted and roasted, but at none of them is either tho hair or beards • of the workmen changed from their natural bun. It is said therefs less arsenic in the ore of the Mar- tin White than in tho of many other mines. • Old smelters say arsenic has no such effect on the hair, and all declare. that the emerald hue imparted to the hair is dueto the presence of some unknown and tuystorious metal or mineral.. White, light -and sandy. beards and hair tato a grass green, whereas black or dark brown hair is dyed a deep bottle green. The hair is not injured by its change of color. It retains its ori Ina} softness and strength. ...,Territorial r torprise. �< Tho Man of Real Force. Contrary to general belief, then, the man of real force is nover a bully, is never arbitrary or: unjust, is never pas- sionate, though he may be, and generally is, aggressive, and may, as. occasion re- quires. give exhibitions ofi temper that is, nevertheless, kept in perfect control. Force of character brings with it self re- name and an imperturbable manner. Just as the really courageous man re- mains cool in the, presence of danger, the self reliant mans keeps hist temper under provocation because he feels confidence in 'himself. The coward grows excited and loud mouthed to conceal his real feelings. The arbitrary man, accustomed to force his views upon others, loses confidence in and control of himself when he fails• to make his usual impression. . It is at such a moment that real force oft • character be- gins to tell; it is then that the self con- tained and self respecting man -dictates his terms and assorts his power.* -•Balti- more Sun. The Seaworthiness of bXonitors. The seaworthiness of the monitors has • been thoroughly tested. The old Monad- nock rounded Cape Horn in 1866 and be- haved admirably in the long .spas+of the Pacific ocean. , Soon after the civil war the old. Miantonomoh made a cruise to ].uropo, encountering heavy weather. The seas would come over bow and stern four feet dcep:,aat• times, but, pass .off quickly without' Sven preventing the use of her gux-ts. •.Sha rolled but 7 degrees, while thou two ,ships accompanying her rolled 20 to 80. degrees. In the report of this cruise byAssistsut Secretary b'ox we find: "A vessel which. attacks a monitor in a seaway must approach very close to have any chance of• hitting such a low hull; and even then; tho monitor is half the time covered up with .three me four feet of water, proteating herself awn dis- turbing her opponent's fire:°' :.American Magazine. Agriculture of the Ainos. The British consul at hokodado'states that the Ainos--who are a remarkable tribe of small,, hairy people, originally living by hunting and fishing—havo been in great straits' since the occupation of their fishing grounds by tho Japanese in 1869. Since 1$$2 efforts have been mado to relieve their distress • and to teach them farming; and hi 1886 about 800 acres wore cultivated by them. In their chief home, in the Island of Yosso, the Athos aro esti- mated to numbei),t4,000 individuals, with 8,600 houses. They are supposed to bo gradually disappearing.—Arkansaw'lrav- olor. E*TJ IENCE. The world was nada when'a than was bolt.. ' Ile must taste for himself the forbidden spud»; He can never take warning from old fashioned things. Es must tight as a boy, be must drinlras'a youth, He must kiss, he must love, he must swear to the truth . Of the friend of Ws soul; be must Iaugb to scorn The hint of deceit in a woman's eyes That aro clear as the wells of Paradtle, And so he goes en tin tbe world grows old, Till his tongue has grown cautious, his heart has ;;rows cold; Till the smile leaves his mouth and the ring leaves his laugh, And he shirks the bright headache you ask bin to quaff. Flo grows formai with men and with women pie lite, And distrustfulof both When they're out of his sight. Thea he eats» for bis palate and -drinks for his , head, Ascii loves for his pleasure, and .'tis time ho were dead, -John Boyle O'Reilly in Nebraska State Journal. • Swiss Boase and Stable. Samaden is a splendid place» to study 'the typo of the Engadine house,' with its 'green eaves, iron •balconies,atld profusion of interior woodwork. Most Houses are built of stone, with walls as thick as those of a fortress, and narrow windows that resemble the portholes of old Fort Lafay- ette, in New York harbor, Tho home, stable and barn form the same building, and all the folks and animate live under the same roof in winter Mae. A large door opens on a spacious vestibule, big enough for er wagon loaded 'with hay to pass into the barn at the back. The main room is generally , paneled • with wood which acquires a riche dark color with age, and. in this room are the two most valu- able pieces of furniture, an enormous stone or tiled stove and a colossal ward- , robe. Behind the stove a narrow stair- way leads to the sleeping room above. In . winter the stable is, of course, • for cows and horses, but insummer time it forms :a spare room where visitors are received and bedded. The kitchen is small, but -.has a large, open fireplace, over which *hang links of sausages and sides of bacon. The modern houses in Samaden aro built on quite a different plan,and have no such fortesslike appearance as those of more ancient architecture. tI should say, though, that even they lack fresh air and ventilation. -"Cor. Now York Times. 1 A Curious Funeral Coremeny. ; Ono curious ceremony still 'survives, and. has puzzled the learned. -When a Parson dies, a dog (originally o.fox eyed dog was demanded, but now a yellow dog with white ears is orthodox) is brought in I<and made to look upon the body. What the ,significance of this is the"modern ! »Parsis cannot explain, or rather .they offer seentribdiotory explanations. Perhaps it is coimeeted with the Parsee tradition of the dogs of rime, tho lord of 'death, who has . two hounds which go •through the earth scenting out those who •tare marked' for the grave, and afterward ' escort .their souls to the place of judg- ement, guarding them ou the way from the 'evil spirits. Possibly the bringing in of .tho dog to look at the corpse had its origin, in the idea of securing the attention of tho dogs of. Pima to the just departed spirit aticl so insuring .the duo protection of tho latter on its lasts perilous jourifoy. —New .`fork Tribune Beek Ileviow. Art of Narking Books. There are many ways of c marking books; and you should kayo the art of .all of them. It you wish to refer may to a passage draw a bit of -pencil laze.. Were the °ego, and then sot down tho number of tho page on a fly leaf. So wheuayou aro through with a volume you look. at the fly loaf and refer to tho pages where there etc points of importance, skid you can use -them as you picaao. Bute• alas,'tf one do finish a book, and there has been not ono passago of note,'aud not ono idea 'quickened, and not even provocation given, what a book is that! Wo should have a special shelf, I think, for imbeciles as wo have asylums for idiots.—"E. P. P." Sia Globe -Democrat. What Statistics Say. Insurance statistics lead to tho remark of a contemporary that Americans of tho middle and upper classes aro healthier and longer lived than Englishmen. ,; As the old man grows more and more blundering, if he will grow more careful it will go far to counterbalance that in- ' firmity. Each indiviclual in a partnership is re- sponsible for the whole amount of debts of a firm„etcept in cases of special parte nership. One principal port of a teacher's busi- ness is to keep bis pupil from being too easily satisfied. Difficulty is the very school of culture and vrogress.—O. Dewey. First riddle to somebody. In the grand orchestra of life everybody is anxious to play first fiddle. Nay, almost everybody does play it;e for althougli the first fuddle absolute may take precedence of all the rest. yet every second fiddle is first fiddle to somebody. -:z's "fleas bete smaller flews to bite 'em, and•so on ad en- flnitum,” so every man whdntickles;a stu- perior has an inferior to tiq'ltle him. t to it were not for this pleasant: arrangement ' wo should have no social harmony, and it is only Men this system of. relations is di. tnrael tart Wo experience discords .and crashes.—New York Ledger. Gilbert at a nolicarsnl. W. S. Gilbert, the librettist, is a tall man, with gray hair and dose cut whis- kers. Ile is a great stage manager. At a rehearsal of one of his operas lie devotes his whole energies to baying everything 0 off as he thinks it should IIo no smiles, oven when a whole chorus is laughing at the quaint conceits of lis versos. Though extremely dignified, ho does not hesitate to go through the drollest contortions of body or tho most free and easy dance stop to illustrate 1 is icleas to dose who aro to interpret them.—Now York World. . g ver Tabooed by the Czar. ' Any book of poems which has tho word "tyrant" in it comet pion the Russian frontier. Tito esar thinks it a direct bit at him. An English book was 1ate1,' teli000d bemuse it had tine sentence, "God's freo air." All the air in Rusoia belt 1ge to royalty. -..Detroit rrco Preen. Vory Unhealthy to Drink. Ate a summer resort tho other day, a bright little 4 -year- old child amused the company by his continual cute questions and answers. • Ono of his sayings is worthy of repeating. Looking out of the window into a> rainstorm, little Willie inquired, " L'MIaxnma, where dons all tho rain Wino from?" "Prom tho heavens." "'And do people drink all that water?" continued tho little »•fellow, "Yes," was the eseply. "WelI,"c rejoined tho small Wit, PIsnould think•it would bo very nn - healthy to drink, there aro so many dead people .nn thereI"--lloston Budget. Pshinters of Political Portraits. Sign painters graduated to portrait work turn out from five to sown portraits in twelve hours, but tho rapid and careless way in which they are done is illustrated on many of the banners now strung. Two or three men often combine in pointing political portraits, One will do tho draw- ing of the head and tho rough lines of the face. Such is known as thio "Iikenoss" artist, and it is ho who is expected to catch the expression. Ono or more amen fill in the coloring and details of dress In this manner the work can be done quickly and to a cortain extent correctly, providing, of course, those eng ,od e, th' Aavo lied eny training isl portrait p ii ng.—.sl,,00htynv.1 .:.�.. . "':.. g1CFYkRi ensete _'1.41 esesn. s •, „eseoteenr, 1 .t "'wr.r.v stvie "ere-..'yw'.;y • WITS. CO WOCI. CA T O 11'11f4C. Absent biindednese of Business hien W l en They Lunch Down Town. "Do you know that many business men aro half crazy when they outer a restau- rant at noon for lunch or dirxner?" This was said to a reporter by the owner of a well known restaurant, who continued: "Their minds aro not upon what they are doing; their brains are busy as can be figuring and planning. Their bodies left their comatiug rooms, but tboir heads re- mained. They, as a rule, eat hurriedly, and any nunibW r of tbetn do so mechan- ically. I havo seen them do tho most ab- surd things possible. Often it happens that ono will throw down one cent at tbe casilier's desk' with a seventy-five cent ox' fifty cent check, and wait for a minute or two for the change. And these are sharp, shrewd, calculating business men, who, if you entered their places of busi- ness, you would find alert enough, and who would never mako a mistake in giv- ing out or receiving money, `They show their mental abstraction in various ways. One will come in, and with deliberation place his hat beneath his clfair, yet when he has done eating he will rush to the rack, and, seizing some- • body olset's hat, go out, probably not dis- covering his error for a day or two. It is. a positive fact that not long ago a man with a 71- head wore out of my place a 0} hat, which would scarcely stay on the top of his head. Nor did he discover his mistake until he reached his office. "Ono day a man stepped up to any desk and complained that he had lost his hat, a. very fine one which had cost him rm. $8. His hat had been stolen, no charged, and he was excited and angry. Would you believe it? It was he who had stolen one. I discovered a' few minutes later that two days boforo ho hed taken the hat of an- other, leaving his own. The one he took was of the same material, but had been worn an entire season, being greasy and soiled; still, ho wore it without discover- ing tho fact until the time he made the complaint, although his own hat was a. fine, - fine, brand new one. "It is truly odd how men will behave about hats. Frequently one will come holding ono in his hand and tell me he did not wear that when he camp in. I look at the faces of these, and if they have but just been shaved, tell them they madothe 'exchange at the barber's and did not dis- cover their error until they came in here Ono man made a great ado because, as he said, some one had carried off his hat, *.when investigation showed that he had worn another man's hat to the restaurant, picking it up as ho loft the office, but nob detecting it until he had eaten. Going out to eat at noon is not an interval of rest to most business men, because there is no rest. They must supply tho wants of their inner man, but they do it without any rest of the brain. Their occupation is before them all the while, as their far away looks show. They say and do things in the most mechanical manner, and will skip. from twenty-four to forty-eight hours in their computations. A level headed man of business insisted up and down,. while holding This own hat in his hand—a nice silk ono—that it did not belong to him. Ile knew what ho had worn dowA town—it was a white one, he declared. I He probably had done so the day before, but would not bo convinced of his error uutil the•name on the inside of the inner band revealed it to him. A man picks up a heap of human nature in our business, because all sorts of things occur, particu- larly at the noon rush, when men do some of the most absurd things in the world, and azo often most unreasonable because ,of their self absorption."—Chicago Herald. Tarring and Teathering. Philologists have long observed that traany words popularly known as "Amer- ••icauisms" aro really good old Eng- lish ..terms brought over by the Pilgrim Fathers, the early settlers on tho James, etc.,.ptnd retained here when forgotten in tho country of their birth. Similarly, not a few. Dutch words—boss, boodle, etc. —brought over by the early Bottlers of New%Amsterdam, have spread from their original American habitat, till they have become part of our speech. It is not less Interesting to note that certain customs, forgotten, in their home land, but ro- ta -hied hero, and, therefore, characterized as "American," aro really importations from Europe. Not onoof these customs has been re- garded as more distinctively "faukoo" than the venerable ono of "tarring and xfeathering," aud yet we learn from the -'Aunales Iterum Anglicarum" of the vein arable en- ,erable English historian Hoveden (living ,iu the Thirteenth century and court chap- lain to Henry III) that the custom is at least as old as the time of Richard tho Lion Hearted. Ile tolls that Richard, ou •+setting out on the third crusade, made sundry enactments for tho regulation of his fleet, ono of which wasthat "A robber .who shall be convicted of theft shall have jus head cropped after the fashion of a champion, and boiling pitch shall bo poured thereon!, and the feathers of a cushion shell bo shaken out on him, so that ho may be known, and at the first land at which the ship shall touch ho shall bo sat on shore." Whether the custom was earlier than this wo have no means of determining. It is at least closo on to 700 years uld.—American Notes. laud Queries. Teo Warily Loaded. :Almost every man of energy loads him .dthf up, if ho has the opportunity, alfa means, with more business aud yro,)eoti and attempts than hie brain can lueld. So that wo either aro fools or elso ztalto ourselves such. ••Bar-Uoman. Lubbor-. on flees. r John ta.bbr:.. s, ea'ring of }.ices be ford the British association, said tllat there ",.soros stroll 4Mdcnce that ;he mother can Can rol,tlin,ue t of the cog," 'iv:h.ses ;-."e:" to ev-45te lir h:h.'.zv knoll (if lonitono iJ fur inure than "Irl:,,,,'', gor4d to prali t. A Clog wi '-" x growl if yo fell him :f bane.--i:tot(:a Neve. . 811:A04'0e for, �ial u tts, 1. ) as ix, Cart i:nig -m (.+' r,,,) Mo i?vk , ger "From wilt,; 1 buye soon of the calomel-. In Liberia i Believe their cbaticea for sac - case are °qualjytas good as they would bu in the south. a is true that the African fever, iv -meaty caws, renders them in • capeblo to work for awhile, but when they become 'thoroughly acclimated they find no difficulty in making a living. A largo,preportion of them areprosperous and arra hoarding up considerable wealth.'" Mos. M. B. Merriman, a white misstati- ng, diners materially from Capt. Rogers and is bitter in'lier denunciation of the cruel manner he which the negro colonists are treated. She said: "I have been among the neferees of the south, and I have aeon them at their worst. I have •;been among the natives of Africa for .years as a missiouary, but never Piave I witnessed such abject poverty, squalor and wretchedness as prevails among the negro colonists in Liberia. It is true that the colonization society furnishes them with land to work and keeps them in. food -for six months from their arrival. But what does it avail them? They are there ,scarcely a month when tboy aro stricken. :down with African fever, Sem° of them. !survive it, but in most cases it means death, When those who got well aro able to go to work they find that their al - .lotted time of support by the society .has expired and they aro paupers. This :is not always the case. While not one 'has ever yet been known to escape the .fever, some of them, who possess un - ;usually good consitutions, got well and ;become quite prosperous. To the pros- perous the paupers Iook for their subsist- ence."—Joe Howard in Boston Globo. Not Very Wicked. 'Little Dick—Papa, won't yon take me ito the circus? Papa—My son, don't you know circuses me wicked? "Yes, papa, but this isn't a regular 'show; it's only 10 cents; children, 5 'cents." "Um—well—or--a 10 cent circus can't 'be so very wicked. Let's go.' =-Pltila- Adelphia Record. Ler Iter Precious Welfare. '"Harry, shall I wear a veil out riding 'with you this evening:" ' "No, dearest; take my advice and don't," ' "Why note" "Maude, yon have been eating onions." "Why, Harry!" • "It is only for your precious welfare _that•I speak. Suppose your breath should get tangled up in your veil. You might ..die of suffocation."—Merchant Traveler. Something Catching The amateur photographer and the burglar have very taking ways, and there is undoubtedly something catching about the policeman and the fisherman.—Har- per's Bazar. Wh. ;in I say Cunt I do not ;lean merrily t"J Stop 2Yteuh for e.tbno, and then have tl.eir ro- klrnnirain..I Iu6AN . RADiCh.L aerie' •.,L' 1aitove,nmde the disease of EITSAM'XILLTS"E'' Or ,C; Ax.mayE ' sztax. is s long sand:,. it WAlttAw•t• my muscly t °Ulm rho tvor,;t eases. Because cr le^.a ba..) fat'_edis no reason fur not bort receiving et. cu» o. Sandal•onceforatreat Ise and al'nr iCa:11,. 01 mmy,� Irrreta ntgi oa;eronee Give I;.t press 'uzcl.efest (Mee. .:t co:,ts yon nethi ec; zee a, trial, and it von eine you. Address • Dr. Ii. G;,.00i'. 37 Tinge 8t., Tota. t,, Oat, l e ra '+f IF�TJi' +']ri•i eVi�:; a! CANADA'S I FADING PAPE& Ell,•i) lit, li nano.) • • lean et:mel n since its est:11111A j•';1t heft met with .tlnpreeeden! 1 :.u,•1•• Si :3111 mire:llt "andu1: atl:eproudp„4 o-1afCtn„ til• 1 •11 .1,•nr1 Ott bat, h or111 t ,111uv 1 he IV I 0 att,t iil''1SC,+?i in Ihellnunls if 1vr :•, '24 I)01 ninx 0..1f4 f.111, the l" Iw1:•'u .+ 1, v' prepared a fund.;, me al i I,.:e•h 1 :, . i'' 11"w.t011N. SC'iClia3t."t F , wr%b• C,t ,:11 to overt/ 4111, '$I l' • » a+ i:1:G'iik1: t t1 t0 (ON t. 13;1.14 Ni ;N, 0leT t One tee. i" 3 ° «eenee »:C:, nee. ISCT le TWO tier. ,AAddroc,s THE EN FIRE