HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1889-10-17, Page 2JACK (1) THS Iilk B.
attrobablyit lytman, lIn, Rbc apini,oeut gee
utthe Most e gine:atoSLendenttttrtygous
-A Startling :ibeory wedArgiennwnc.,
Mr. Lawson Telt, the eminent wattle/de
surgeon, hevfrg read the suggestion pubiieln
ed in the Pall Mall Gazette them "Jack the
Ripper" might be a woman, had the. other
dull a abet With ane of that peper's represen-
bai 1vett, He said' ;
"'No serious euggeation in emenootien with
this natter that °tie eau make may be wise
Iydieeerded or made light M. Ube pollee have
.discovered =thaw, and are evicaently.:at
their wits' end.They must begin afreab.
" I have taken a great interest in these
tragedies fromthe very oolnmeneement.
Now, looking; at the eubj:ct ase surgeon,
tee first confusion "is. that the whole of the
nturctere, not only in \'Phitteohemel, but in
etettereea and Cheleea are the work of .one
and the same individual. Theymuet bogrcuta
e3 together. Secondly, the orimee are the
work of a lunatic, The absolute'inotivelees.
nese of tho whole business ebowe thio.
"Again, the operator must have been a
peraoft ecoustomed to use a theipknife upon
meat. The work was done by no ourgeosl.
A surgeon Outs in a niggling khan of Way.
The murderer' in these oasts has worked in
a free, ulaahlizg manner. The criminal meat
flare been a butohoe and a London butcher.
The cute are made in lt tasiaiou peculiar to
the Landon butcher. They would •have
been glade quite differently if tho operator
had hailed from Detain or Edinburgh.
't T have acid the criminal was irrtaxl.. Etc
or elle is undouh'-edly a preen naming
from epileptic furor. The fi>a only 'eat for
a short time. May not the polite l e Decree
ab the outeot by the important q.teatiaa •of
cunt Tem male epileptic) hae hie fits irre•
:•finlariy; in the case of a woman this is not
-so. This is sonlethirag to go upon. Granted
that .= epileptic be the criminal, on, coming
out of bili or her £t the cf•nder Welke
leave no rocalieetien of the murder qr out•
'Ate lip, and would resume his or her every-
day life in no way perturbed by what had
happened. Nothing is more likely than
that ' Jack the Pepper' is some big, strong,
woman engaged at a slaughter house in
oleanieg up, new and then actual'y cutting
up meat.
'APB:, in a number of instancea the
'tvoneen wkenfonnd were hardly dead. The
bodies were :warm; the murderer could not
be far away. The feat that the police were
ao close upon the criminal gees to prove to a
wonderful degree thatthe operator was a
woman. On the discovery of one of the
murders the police promptly made a circuit
round the neighborhood. Nobody was
arrested, or, rather, no man was arrested—
they did not look for a woman."
"How could a woman have so cleverly
committed the deed 1"
" It must be clearly, understood that who,
ever was the oriminal would be thoroughly
splashed with' blood. It wautd be impossible
to hack and hew a warm body in " R:ppor"
fashion without getting all over. blood. A
man who thus, besmeared himself could not
time after time.
clear awayt e
e got
possibly have
The thing would be perfectly easy for a
woman. See here." Aere Mr. Lawson
Tait picked up a Liberty "chair back" and
placed it round himself like an apron,
Conceive the murder done and the Woman
all splashed. All she has to do is to roll up
her skirt to her waist, leavingher pebticoat,
and fold up the shawl that is over her
shoulders and tucked in ab her middle.
Then she. might peas through the croud with
the very slightest fear of detection.
"Then as to washing the blood -dyed gar'
moats. What would a man do? Plunge
them into bot water. Result, the blood
coagutatee, won't come cif, and stains the
clothes. And where is he to got hot water,
or how is heto pour away bloody water un-
detected? A. woman is always at the wash
Mg tub, and she would put the clothes in
• cold water, when, with e little soap .and
rubbing, they would become.' clean, praoti•
cally unstained, and elle would be uneuspe°t
ed.
"An important point to be noted in 0011•
connection with what has been termed the
fiendish disembowelling of the bodies, and
with reference to the particular place at.
which the inoisions have been begun. le is bungling with their instruments, may cheer
eemeneeereetteenianconhfortEgof high oivilwetioza ea it: really.
does..
Mexico reuetiibleert.i' i to ti love Mr ego
and the open air, For the men the cefo in
the evening largely tt!•lsea thee pleee of tba
eeofal drawing eeele. There la no such bklieg
alt ". society ",..111 our emetning of the tenial--
ne reo;'lations cr germane or evening calkitg.
The only, recourse seen deft tho kache1or or
mlemceth) married man is the theater or
cafe, ;The former is a poor well of altetnetive,
Not that there areno good troupes ilei the
country, but the theater' to a gloomy place
en thewhole. There is too much of it in the
city, to begin with, there being three large
theetere and a perennial &mus. ;Thehousee
aro very large, with four and five tiers • of
galleries, and the city patronage beingdivid.
ea up among them, they seem tareanarily Wo•
fully tristo and empty. Mon keep on their
hats and smoke during the entre'ctee, there
are ordinarily neither dregs suits nor evening
tenets to be seen in either box or pit and aI•
together on trtisaee the attnotphere of fashion
and refinement to be found at home, A
compensation i should not omit reference to
is the foot that the Mexican Wiwi do nob
wcar hats at the theeter,
BRt?:'IS a NEWS.
There lea growing demand in E ,gland
for henna akin leather,
The pockets of the British Infantry coat
aro tc be sewed up till the men are on active
duty;
Eighteen ton et steel diaapp er daily on
the single evetcm of the London and Ncrbh.-
f hT fB;BA.' KA NS.
Oluens:or Trelablo Whielm 1Point to a Gener;tl.
Couvnistouto the irenb sula.
Repent everts indicate that Russia is on
the eve of acquiring the oomplete ueeendency
over Servia which ehe p(lsseseed . before ,the
loot war with Tttrktay, In the general eleo.;
tion for the Skuptsohiva, or Strviae Flouee
of goinmops, the Radicals, who are avowedly
and'fervently llro Re elan', have been: over
wheimiegly`sueoessful. The Belgrade Gov-
ernment, moreover.. bas accepted the Czar's
offer to educate in Russia 300 young Servian
students, selected for their iutelleotualebil -
rv�, What is even. more eilrnifieent, the ex-
Qaeere Nathalie, who is a Russian by birth,
eduoatlon, acid symoat hy, has, inspite of the
proteste of the ex King Milan, and of the
eo-called Regents, who rule but do not goy,
ern, returned to Belgrade end announced a
firm intention of renwining,there,
At the first glance :Austria' seems ro have
irremediably lost a great deal of ground in
the Danubian region sinoe the abdication of
1'eince Alexander of Batbenb.arg,
"" . JUST BL+TOBE THAT EVENT
titij ;ffrieiadewere dominant in Sofia, Bel.
grade, and Bacharest. Now; her enemies
preponderate Ila the two las tam msd capitals,.
white at Sofia Prince Fardinand„of C.tburg
avowedly fights for his own hand, and nlay
onneefvably tet any time dome to terms with.
Amnia. The Vienna Govornment, however,
has some Dards left to play. Winteyer
personal influence belongs to Kiag Charles
of Roumania he could doubbleas be persued•
ed to wield on its. behalf. Its devoted.
partisan, the ex King Milan, may at any
western R ninety, through wear a' cI rust, neer retern t4 Seeela, wherd 119 Mill has
1I'r, $purger ft achnLrers in tone” are Matey t dbarents. Above all ib hold ln. re.
disturbed by a turner that he is seriously serve Prinea Alexander, who, should he
ceneemplating re 4rement from the pulpit.
reenter Bulgaria,arta,
could ld count on an cult
us•
iastio weloome from the people. Bat, Inas-
much fibre is sassing into considerable use much as Count Kalnogy remains the Austro-
in the manufacture of brown paper, being Hungarian Minister of Foreign Affairs, we
about fifty per cant,' cheaper than wood goo no reason to believe that hie oountry'rs
cult, diplomatic resouroes and opportunities in
Some electric railways wilt be laid along southgaatern. Europe will be turned to much
the rivers of northern Rosie, where the ex• better account in the future than they have
Creme cold endures during a great part of the been in the past.
year. It seems probable that, if the present
A rector and congregation in the parish of state of things continuos, the. Servian army
Useadlegot into aueh a row ever the length Will be rforganiz.d
of the etrvice'tbet the Bishop :of Chester had OPENLY OR SIIRREPT,TI0r18LY
to be called in, and disciplined by Russian officers, as it was.
The sustaining poWer of the Porth Bridge in J874 75, and, when restored to compare.
may be imagined from the statement that tive cfaienoy, will be launched against
each cantilever would sustain six of the Bulgaria on some plausible pretext trans-.
greateeb ironclad& mitted from Sb. Petersburg. Unless suoh a
The Eiffel coiffeur is to be introduced into design were contemplated, :the incidents
London life from Paris, and will be entirely above mentioned would :have no raison
composed cf hair. The back' hair is to be d'etre. A Servian movement against Bal -
worked up to may permissible height and is to geria, however, . maab, under the exiating
end very taperingly. `' ciroumsbanoes, provoke a general convulsion
Evangelical churchmen in Eogland are in Cho Balkan peninsula. The Porte has
getting elatnhed at the prospect of a re- declared that such a demonstration would
vitae of the menaatio system in the Anglican be met by the interposition of a Turkish
Church. The aubjeot' will be discussed at army. The Vienna Government, also, un-
the next session of Conv:tcation. less ib means to all are the hope of swath-
Anew em' the' Terre Ton ulnoiae is in ward expansion and to leave a free field to
g aP q , the PateSievio aspirations which threaten
the market. When cut like diamonds it fe even the Repeburglpossessions with dismem-
said to be veru beautiful. Its color is a dark bermenb, would have to interfere.' As Ras-
blue, more brilliant .than sapphire, though siawould uxqueetionably support her Ser•
acme vs inttes have a purple]e or red tingge
• viten protege, all the elements of a iar•reaoh•
After destroying a very large numher of ing contest:' would be lorthcoming. Even
letters, Mr. Gladstone has seim:tad 60;000 assuming for tho moment that Germany and
for preservation, and has built for them a Italy might nob be parties to the millet, we
fireproof room. When his biographer comes should still see arrayed upon the one side
to overhaul them, he will Bad hie work half Austria. Turkey. and Bulgaria, and on the
done in advance. other Russia, Servia, and Roumania, the
pro
A London journal is very despondent on
•Ruasian party having lately,:as we
the prospects of profe4sianalmeu in England. pointed out above, regained control at Bz-
eharesb.
rmy
classes, it says, is steadily going down. It a or gins r alp a Ely be and
fo scally as difficult now for a member of Austria, to which Italy subsequently became
the professional classes to make £500 a year a party, provided, not for an unconditional
as it was for his father to make a thousand. offensive and defensive alliance, but for co.
operation in case one of" the contracting
Mr. Gladstone on one occasion in a speech Dowers
told a atory illuetreting the want of humor SHOULD nen=seer ASSAILED
among Engliebmen. According to the ex. by two enemies at once. In the complication
Premier, a ball and conoerb were gotten UP'above euppaeed, Austria and Turkey, which
by a clergyman in order to provide the pariah are both; nominally powere of the first class;:
with a hearse. This has been nearly outdone would be opposed to Rosie. There. would
by a ball which was held ab. Dingwall, in scarcely be ground, tberefore, for German
Ross'abire, Scotland, in order to provide an and Italian interference under the ternia; of
operating table for the Ross Memds
orial Hoe the original compact, How much the bon
pitea in the town, ' uniting • the three central Governments have
The rate of emolument for the professional Th i 1 t e batty en Ga
Amateur photographers who have lost have been tightened by later treaties and
great opportunities for views: through 'informal agreements is not definitely known,
but it• is believed that Bismarck would not
suffer his Austrian ally to be seriously
discomfited by Russia. He might, indeed,
postpone any over proof of empathy on the
theory that Turkey, whioh, aingle•handed,.
held Russia and Roumania ab bay for a
conalderatle time, might, with Austrian
aseiatanoe, prove more than a match for its
former antagonists. Bat should the invasion
oftGalicias which is believed to be a feature
of the Czar's programme, be successful, the
House of Hapsburg might need aid from
Germany in order to retain its hereditary
dominions.
In each a crisis it is incredible- that ]raiser
William II. would remain quiescent.
no wild slashing, done without method by a
novice with the knife. Having cut the
victim's throat from behind, the operator
simply by an aot.of unconscious cerebration
goes bowork inthe regular butcher fashion.
Having alit the calf's neck the next thing to
be done is to niake an incision at: the bottom
of the abdomen, and lay aside the various
organs in the very fashion reported at the
inquests as having been doae. The resstnb-
lance between the Ripper's' work and that
of the butcher's is complete.
"On at least one of the occasions when the
police came upon the mete there were to be
noticed several women in the _crowd: that
quickly gathered. Had those bystanders
been searched there is all •the ;chance
that the airline' would have been oa t
ur
sd" What advice do you, then, give to the
pollee ?" our representative asked.
" Let them visit all the slaughter bowler
in thedietriot, immure as to male or female
regular assisbanta or' 000asional beips-there
are not so many slaughter hones, and they
are all licensed and under the health
authorities -and find out what facilities
there are for entrance into the houses after
the work of the day is done.
"If this were carefully done ab once the
police would' catch the criminal in a week.
The police need, to go on a brand new road.
Life in Mexico City.
Much has been written on the climate of
Mexico. Too much cannot be said in its
behalf, In the city,' at an altitude of 7.500
feet, there is no chimney in night and fires
are almost unknown to any save the dusky
vote's who bend over charcoal braelers of
the kitchen. The mean average of the
mercury for about eight yeata summer and
winter, chows 60 0 Fahr. Tho limits are
34 ° —86 ° The air is dry of course, except
.
n.
at
'
during the actual rain, and, while aforeign.
er finds himself disqualified by thin rare,
Motion for any extraordfuary exertion, yet
it gives him a particularly buoyant, sham-
ana-�e like feeling. Rain generally 'falle
each afternoon from June to ()etcher, and
the next day's sun ihinee through the fresh•
ebb and parent ent of atmospheres. Mexico's
streets, however, aro very dirty.
The coat of living in Mexico need nob be
rent: A pod room own be had for $1 a
d g
day and board at a good cafe for $28 a
Month, Whatever may be the experience
of foreigners rho will stop at placed where
theyare robbed who will hire gtiided to go
every block or two With them, and who are
too ignorant of the language to protect them
>telvos—in spite of this a much amalier
lucerne suffieen one here than in the same
sized antes of the United States. Dna does
tot always get the same quality of fare or
or what else he -eye for, as in
attendance, �._
d ed
to be u
u ht not
tho States,but Mexico o g judged
yet byl`l'etr York or Parte standards. The
wonder 15 that a country eo long isolated
from the rest of the world and struggling
With so many difficulties of rasp, xellglea and
education should poabead as many of the
up after reading of the performance of Dr.
Johnston•Levia, deputed by the Royal
Geological Society to investigate the volcanic
phenomena of Vesuvius. El eying advanced
w• near to an eruption that his porters ran
away, he got two superb eights only todieoovei
afterward that a portion of the focussing
sloth: had covered the lens so that only a
small corner of the pl:.tea showed any im
preaefon.
The value to c:otland of the opportunities
Lor sports is very large. The deer forests, of,
which there are 109, covering 3 000 square
miles of land useless for agriculture, rent for
£100,000 annually. £12,500 of this goo to.
the local taxes. If any forest fails to be
rented, the whole neighborhood feels it greab
ly in the diminished e ed
amount of money ex
pended there. The grouse moors rent for
£440,000 and pay £55,000 in taxes, Most
salmon rivers are let with the moors,' but
some are rented alone, and add a consider
able sum to the total already given.
Some of the ecclesiastical journals of Lon-
don are very indignant with the Anglican
Bishop of London for allowing his
name to appear on , the Mansion
House manifesto below that of Cardinal
Manning. Asa matter of toot, the signatures
of the Bitfaop and the Cardinal were placed
on the .same line. Sir Thomas Dakin . was
the first Lord Mayor who recognized the title
of Cardinal at the Mansion House during
his Mayoralty. The two titles held by
Cardinal Manning are conferred by a foreign
dignitary, and are not legally recognisid in
`the United Kingdom.
Mrs. Maybrick's photographs are the sen -
cation of the hour in London lust now. The
preliminary difficulty prevented their
sale seems to have been overcome, and full•
length portraits of the unhappy woman at-
tired in widows "weeds" ate to be acme in
photo.
heprincipal
the windavrs of allt
graphers' shops in the olty and the west end,
They invariably attract a gaping crowd,.and
the police have all their work out out tc
keep even 3 portion of the pavement clear
for pedestrians, while the ge z Ire seem to
base their comments on the facial character -
titles or the views they hold as to Mrs, May-
brick's innocence or guilt.
The true scientific attitude of the day, as
expressed by the president of the British As•
}imitation. Pro.1 1owor, is a suspended .jedgg
menb." Prof. Flower endorses Sir John Lula
book's idea that the field of inquiry is limit.
teas; and that there may be fifty other sen-
sed 50 different from ours ae sound 15 from
Sight ; and even within the boundaries of Purifies the breath, and preserves the
our own senses there may be audios sounds teeth, Adams' Tubti Frutti Gum. Sold by
which we cannot beery and colors diffrmntall arizggeit5 and confectioners, 6 cent%
as red from green of whioh we have no idea. An exam ile a£ the depreciation of agri
n a thousand other questions re-
nein and familiar
- " world blot cultural Laud in Ent?1(and wan afforded within
Ella w rdw
math for aolutaan. The famr
Surrounds tut ma be &totally different place a fortnight when a farm in Lincolnshire was
to . To thetas it may be ,full offered for sale. The highest bid was 42,100
ala. y h ro ert. oast £6700 0l hteen
to other animals. or although the y g
of music which. we cannot hear, of pot g l? 1? .
Which We oanriot see, of sensations which we years ago, and a oonstderabio stun had since
cannot eoneoive, s been expended in improvements,
M
The Chmb.C,
rs ofMt. Blanc.
t
Up to the first of this month thirty•seven
persona had succeeded this year in reaching
the summit of Mont Blanc. Five of those
who breve this season stood on top were
Americans.
Compared with some other Alpine summits,
Monb :Blanc is not a very diffioalbor den-
serous climb, but it puts ordinary powers of
endurance to the teat, and the number of
people who fail to reach the summits, either
through fatigue or bad weather, fully equals
that of the more fortunate climbers.
That Mount Blanc may be ascended by al•
most anybody of fair pbysieal powers is
shown by the fact that Mies Flossie Morro,
only thirteen years old, climbed the moun.
Iain in August last year under rather diffi-
cult circumstance, as the' wind was blowing
eo strongly that the party were oblige to re-
trace their steps part way and 'take another
route to the top, Danger is sometimes met
with, however, particularly early or late in
the Beason, .when 'the climbers may he caught
in such a snowstorm as neatly overwhelmed
Mr. Aitken's party in June last. They did
nos reach the top, and, losing the track for
a while, had a terrible time getting down,
Among the 2,000 tourists who in the past
century have stood on top of the gloat sum-
mit are only forty women—hardly the proper
proportion, for many women are an thusi'
antic and skilful mountain climbers. They
say in the Whitd lyiountalns that a few wo-
men have climbed' Mount Washington.
through Tuokerman's Ranine and down
again by the same route in one day, which
le considerably more than the average man
ogres to do. And is the game worth the
candle ? some will ask. If they could get to
the top once they never would ask it again
JOHN LAB J.. T'S
Indian Pa/ . Ale and XXXBrownStout
;highest i;warzs ana a'fedttls for Purity and .Excel -
lance at Centennial Exhibition, .l'kiiladelphia,
1876; Canada, 187C1; Australia, 1877 ; and
Paris, France, 1878,
'1"ESTIt30NIALS SELECT/1D:
Prot, H 1-I Croft, nubile Analyst, Toronto, says 1--'t1 flue it
to 1%0 perfoOtly tweed containing no impurities or adultor•
abiot.s, and eau strougly recommend it as perfectly pure and:
a very superior malt liquor," •
Sohn 0 ,8 .wards, Professor of Obetoistry , atontreal, says:
"1 d:410:em to bo remarkably scant ales, crewed troin
pure malt and bops
Bev, P: J, Hd. page. Professor of Chemistry Laval Iloivor:
slay, Quebec, says :—"I l : ve analyzed the Indian Pale Ale
nhauufeaturod bvJohth Labatt, London, Ontaaio, and bays
found it a lightale, eontainrng but little alcohol, of a deli-
eloue fiaYOr, and of a veil agreeable taste and superior
duality, and compares with the best imported mem '1 hive
also analyzed the Porter XXX stout, of the same brewery,
which is of otcelient quality; its flavor is very agreeable ;
it is a tonic more energetic than the above ale, for it is a
little richer in alcohol, and can be compared advantage-
ously with any imported petiole.
ASK gOUJt GROCElt FOR IT.
MAN B.JFAO .L URERS OF
rand, Square @ Upright
PIANOFORTES.
The Oldest Manufacturers in the Dominion.
Seven Thousand Pianos Now in Use.
•
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The Whole Composed of the Choicest Material and of the Most Thorough Workmanship.;
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PIMPLES AND f tACICi9EAllS o xemovedtig
AOTI.COIIPIILENCE,PILLS' bot'9P°69.
trdml4tdaOdays Wsrra¢ted P"Icoforabdayetr atment,$1.
Obit ie a tiiattor of 8alialttifle, ti•hether termer) it 1B :^i•
feetable er tn,1n 1118nable >tA2'.POLtta ming Aa.'
gpORPULCNOE PILLS 1.18 1b 110, a month. They cues,
he get ad o; contain 5. poison, ana hover fall, 5810. far ane
knoll h'8 treatment, Si; or throb menthe medicine, 60.
y�p@rant�#d. �qi�},{� g,�+
1.9rOniriEXIEd.SQ_ WAFERS, au31 NNANI'S:y
1 AasuNronr
Math Elie stein, dSvoloph Eno Perin,, 1 ltrreleta. Permanent
n71a8f, Nero, ate. Mattel 1:1188, m 8i:r boxes ler 56.
AcelteenV4AttAntli C .&bbAAwrtlt9Yct$p.
Ne 2045 D"+n OutOuts�trdat West tlst Voa'o to � .a oat,
" Way do ott pall your paper the I5•�ly
Smasher 4t' ""yBeeettse itbreaks the neve.''
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e, ,ee5, yo ask orer gee ,y
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e b 1.x',4 roe. 4�' ,,o{ 6$4.
Manufactured only by Thomas Ho11oway, 78, New Oxford Street,
late 083, Oxford Street, Loudon. Is 1
VT Purchasers should look to the Label on the Boxes and Pots'
If the address is not 533, Oxford Street, London, they are spurious.
(. )
Exeter Lum1:tor Yard..
The Undersigned wishes to inform the public in general that he keeps
-constantly in stock—
Al Kinds of BU MATERIAL
DRESSED OR UNDRESSED.
a n hand at mill prices. Flooring, Siding:
A large stook of Hemlock lwaya 1 o Doors. .
dressed --inch,` inch -and -a -quarter, inch -and -a half•and two inch. Sash
Blinds, Mouldings' and all Finishing ' Material, "Lath Sze.
SHINGLES A SPECIALTY. --Competition challenged. Tho best and the
stook,and at lowestprices. Shingles A. 1.
largest d for use. No shrinkag
All dressed lumber thoroughly seasoned and ready o
assured,. A call will bear out the above,
THE OLD ESTABLISHED
Main-st
Jas. 1i�.iS,
wee `l�ia't'aJ
4 -.Y: U
' J Z1 —I
�t _J ,tel
AGENT
l
r
.1 -lay �
Townslai Fwnaeis'' Mut
ual'•Fire Insurance Co.
A; PURELY FABIAE/IS' COMPANY.
Live Stook also insured, whoa in thefields
or on the road in charge of owner, or servant
alsomanufaoturer of tho Improved Surprise
'Washer and Wringer b2neh nes. Agent for
Tomb Stones and the Watson Implomenta,. ^#
Ilattendsut to..
a. 110L' ZMAN,
,•-,�„krp, g
VW” '?r'rvJ�
e 7001•
hl¢D�6t.;�iil:.:3Ei0TQ11Cu1M11U1eY110S�9,d&:;r Pornlln ift
.tdat ehiie8 Ps5tad. Peetf•
ltt tt bt005 tions g inners. Steele oo5ip+ Ito, With
p
inr ri.cldh�ltalies to. beginners. 9too[e camptotaw; witif faot•se111irg' speciall,ids,
tA'CtT'?u"1C f1;" $tl li. We otaarcvltted 85551110// advertise.. Write liltittWal
aCii4.y 1Y"'treeernee, •osseus atee4 N.' V. Opts house l9 reliabte,). '
aYf',a kill"