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Lucknow Sentinel, 1891-03-27, Page 74 tt' Q. WOVEN 48 WORKEIM. answer, with her Arai honors in the :elaseIoal tripoe of the gime great seat of ',mining, and Helen Reed, who won the dargent prize at our own 'Fair Rivard,' What They are Doing; in the Oharoh, ere long to become [note, worthy of ire iuu Polities and in 8ohool• name by resew of fair play rendered to tlto.tOar,seat.. Let: Mademoiselle• Bello Bnohareat, simmer who paned the examination in the Paris Law Scheel, ie the first lawyer known to human an who studied that profession in orde defend the poor without a fee. Let F enoe Holland !newer, who lael year wo double first in Latin and in Englie CalcutMies l rill>~rd, I'reeident of the National w menta University-" Ia France, Wornen'e Conference now in session lin walking owing rapid advato the nces, end hued i on Wallhn t g , in her o en In ad d ,e. ll� �st•,v.--„„+� i•� a �, ra ' ` ,•-..,.a ?71"r��'�et.-•:1;ta ,.it�lta.• ,.'1.'+4„��;IA `J.:.. •ixm a73'2r rr. wo'men in to lectaal-pureuite, notably Madame A the civilized world, socially, politioally and and Madame Severini, the famoae j economically, and reoited eome .of the evi- nails' and; philosopher. In Spain, a denote of their labors .and their move- woolen are at the front. There are m menta toward the point of self- than 500 in that country who, dependence as oo•laborere with men cording to a Dictionary •ot Spa in the work of advanoing the world. Writer,, earn their livings by their p She could not say what number " One noteworthy woman, Duna h'ans of women in the United States were Baez de Melger, has been on the edits earning their own living. beo nee the nee_ ..4-ar -z�.. on any in 1880 became the Spanieh translator of bulletine under that head, bat she was able Carmen Silva, the Roumanian Queen. to state upon the authority of the reepeo- Dona Maria del Pilar Sinew de Marco, the tiv�! wife of a leading dramatist, is a contributor to the leading journal, and has written sixty volumes. Dona Concepcion Arenai is a leading writer on social reform; Dona Ceoeilia Bahl de Faber (Fernan Caballero) writes realistic Spanieh novels, and Dona Emilia Pardo Bazen, another novelist, is the editor or the Revisia de Galicia, and has written a book .on ' Dante, Milton and Taseo,' and a critical eesay on ' Darwin- ism.' A year ago °he name very near being eleoted to a vacant seat in the Aoademy." It mast be evident from all this that the Nineteenth Century is des• Slued to witness the oomplete emanoipation of woman•and the enforcement of naivetes' suffrage. LIGHT 00TERIE OF OLEVER WOMEili. ♦11 the Avenues of Trade and Learning Crowded by Women. LINCOLN, ON T IIRBBAIZION. aztraet from a Speech by the Great Liberator. Whether 'or not the world would be vastly benefited by a total and 6'414 ooiot "banishment from' 11 0I' ill' .into lusting beat drinks, seema to me not now an open and question. Thrse•fourths of mankind oon- nale tees the affirmative with their tongue); r tie' and I. believo, ell the rest acknowledge it in lor- their hearts. Ought any, then, to refuse n s their aid in doing what • the good of the h at whole demanda? * * Of oar political too, revolution of 1776 we are all justly proud. are Is has given us a degree of political freedom reds ter exceeding that n; , .ot r.a w .°. :•..+a°liciitl3. °thd world bas dam found a solution of the long mooted our- problem, as to the capability, of man to leo, govern himself. In it ,wall the germ whioh ore has vegetated, end still is to grow and so- expand into the universal liberty of man- nish kind. Bat, with, all these glorione result°, ens: past, preeent and to Dome, at had its evils tins too. It breathed forth famine, ,wpm in Tial blood an I , , _ • , fire • _and_ innr. 5;6 enp� 8,75 governments of those countries that 1,000 women in Germany are lielf- orting, 4,000,000 in Great Britain, 1.,000 in- France, and 3,750,000. in Ametria -Hungary. These figures eloquent as to the industrial progress and growing independence of women. But it is not alone in bread -winning that they have mnoh such rapid strides. . They have made" an advance all along the line, and are now reokoned with as a force in nearly every- thing that concerns. mankind—in religion, politica, social progress and in trade and manfaoturee. Mies Willard, setting this forth, explained that: / More than •'82 per cent. of all our pnblio sobool teaohere are women ; that over 200 colleges have now over 4,000 women •students; that industrial eohoole for., giiie are being founded in almost every State ; that hardly a score of colleges in all the nation still exclude us, and, that thoee begin look sheepish and speak • in tones pologetio, while the Univereityof Penney'. ania was lately opened, Barnard College n New. York is the -Ranee to- magnificent Colombia, and the Metbodiet University of Washington, D. C., the Leland, _Stanford.. and Chicago Universities, with oountleee millione baok of them, are, in all their de- partments, including divinity, to be open so women. Reflect that aim are omitted to' the Theological tiemineries of the' -.Metho- dist, Congregational and Unierealiet churches, to say nothing .of half a dozen smaller eoolesiastioal communions i. that -.-----the Free`Baptist and several other churches • now weloome women delegates to their higbeet oounoile, while we vote in the local assembly of almost every ohnroh in Christendom, except the Catholic, and that, while some of no were rejeoted as delegates by the General Con- ference of the Methodist Episoopel Church in 1888, that body submitted' the q ae s tion to a vote of 2,000,000 Methodists, and 62 per cent. of those present and voting de- clared to be in favor of oomplete equality within the " household'of faith." Beside all this, remember that the Order of Deaoonetime is now recognized in the Episoopal and Methodist Churches, and is practically certain to be within this year by Presbyterians ; that a simple, reason- able costume is insured to those' who enter upon this vocation, and they are to be oared for in siokness and age, thus being at one stroke relieved of a , lifetime's Dare in return for their eervioe to humanity. Pass in review the philanthropies of women— involving not fewer than sixty eooietiee of national scope or -value, with their hun- dreds of State and -tens of thousand, of loose auxiliaries, both North and South, and the countleee local boards organized to help the defective, dependent and deliogaent classes in town and oily (all of whom would be eeronger if each olaee were correlated natiocally study the " college settlements " or ooloniee of oollege women who eetablieh themselves in the poorer parts of great oitiee and work on she plan of Toynbee Hall, London ; think of the women's 'protective agenoiee, women'a . sanitary aesooiations and ex- changes, industrial eobools and eooietiee for physical oaltnre—all of which are bat - olastere on the heavy -laden boughs of the Christian civilization. * * •' * Just thirty years ago, in 1861, Gen. Spinner, of grateful memory, proposed, the admission of women to employment in the' United • States Treaeary. Ae Salmon P. Chum was -Secretary of that' Department, his permission wee Bought and freely obtained, # 'but so much difficulty was made by men V who wanted the work that Attorney. General Edward Bates had to render an opinion favorable to the women, and we may well .believe that Abraham Lincoln, always our friend, was in sympathy with the movement. Advanoing from these generalities to par. 'Hoaleire and -persona, Mise Willard amid that " the air of these last days was electric with delightful tidings, , In No* York City such leaders as Mary Putnam Jacobi and Mrs. Agnew have '. rallied around Dr. Emma• llempin, the learned lawyer'- from .�Lansant e, and are helping to makeit eseier than ever before for women to enter the learned- profession that has been most 1 thickly hedged away from them. In Belli- ' more Mitre Mary Garrett, the most progres- sive woman of wealth that , our country ' has produced, leads the movement that will yet open Johns'Hopkine University to ns, and has already mortgaged AB mediioel college to the admieaion of women." Then there are Mies Greenwood, of Brooklyn, superintendent 'ot evangelistic work in the National Woman's Christian Temperanoe Union, with her list of 700 women presohere and evan eliete ; the Sal- vation. Arley, with its largeland increasing corps of women workers ; and last, though not least, the Catholio Katherine Drexel, who on February 12th oonseorated herself by solemn vows to the exclusive service of the Indian and the negro, devoting her forearm of $7,000 000 to their religious, in• tellectaal and soeial elevation. So mnoh for women at home. Abroad they have been egeally industrious, and have made se rapid advancement and as notable enooese. Ana vering the.queetion what her foreign sinters have been doing with their time during the; pant three yearn, Mies Willard responds+: '• Let Phillippa Fawcett answer, with her farnnue 400,, marks above the meroilesely nemol' sg Senior Wrangler of Ciern-bridge U nivereity,, , let Miens Alford, ,Dison tie . the great . clean Altar A HALF-DOZEN DON'Td. . Possibly There Slay be one in the Lot That Will Interest Ton. " Don't " wait until in front of a ticket - seller's window before trying to find your drapery -hidden pocket. " " Don't " carry your umbrella with otter dieregard of the people behind you or on either -aide._ " Don't " tell the clerk behind the counter what you think of that store sod she system under which it run. He only receives $10 per week; " Don't" make the mistake of thinking. that your affairs are the most imporoant in the world. " an't_t� occupy the end- self -in -a pew - and compel other people to pose you. " Don't " treat the hotels clerk &self he were a peraonal enemy. " Don't be afraid to• be graoions. sparing the Rod. The parent who thea to the rod to oorreot every triflingfault or misdemeanor, says the " Ladie' Home Journal," will have no infl enee with her children when they are too old to be governed by force. A ohild should never be struck in anger. A box on the ear may rapture the membrane that forme the drum, and cause permanent deafness. A hasty blow may do mischief that year, of repentance cannot undo. Punishment is for discipline, not for re- venge. It is to teach the child to avoid evil and do right. It never should be a vent !or the angry passions of the mother. Lobe, patience andfirmness are the in- etrriments she must use to mould her child's character. Paniebneene is a means to an end ; let her pray for graoe to 'nee it wisely. A m'an'e Ide* of an•,apron. As the apron, the—average mant n knows he likes it, and y.et he can't tell just why. He says very vaguely :." Well, you know it's .white and has such cunning pockets, and the Fittings tie so prettily about the waist ; and then, don't you know, We so essentially womanly. The fellow who looks at it always thinks to . himself that girl `knows something about making a home, and he can imagine her with an apron on walking around in the morning and seeing that her household is in order." In the apron in the very essence of coquetry, —Bab, in Chicago Globe. Next Door. Detroit Free Press : When the woman of the house answered his ring he began : " Madam, I am sorry to disturb you, lent-I-came-here-lrmn-Buffetcrt�ind rant at my occupation, and being unable to strike —" ' e What is your 000npation ? " she de- manded. " I am a nurseryman." " Then drop in next door." I" Bat, madam, I--" " Next door, I say ! They have seven ohildren there, while we havent any ! " The Best Time Tho work, while yon oan. To bow wild oats—never. To sing, when you feel like it. To ory, is while you can't help it. To laugh, is when you oan afford to. The best time to think, is before yon aot. To eake'oare of your health, is before you lose it. To make a, good resolution, is when you intend to ' keep it. To judge another, is when you are in the same predicament. The best time to atop your meanness, is before yon begin. -Ram's Horn. Mrs. Rives-Ohauler's New Novel. Washington Star : A buggery, kissery, Emotional misory ; A yeernfu ly soulful wail ; A Qnielt or the Deadery, i3ound to be readery, Amalie Ri, esey taloa A Matter of coarse. Boston Herald : Emily—Now that yon are engaged to Harry, does he ever ask you fora hies? Julia—He never has yet. Emily --Dear me! Is he 6liefildf13=- -1-': Julie -On no ; lie takes them Without making. The mother ofcrow Louie Stevenson, the novelist, keeps a mighty scrap b3ok, in which she hie gttherol everything that has been written eoneerning her son: Oa the title pities of the sorap beck these linea are ,. eines tined . _ " Seatek weol o' my 'rive, apet►lt lily heeer rove, L ear ye -be li ifli ink o' Misr, \\ n ory an • ,e wile wail continued to break the eadeilenoe that ensaed. These were the price,_ the inevitable price, paid' for the bleesinge it brought. Turn now to the temperance revolu- tion. In it we shall find a stronger bondage broken, a viler slavery manumitted, a greater tyrant deposed. In it, more of want suppliers, more oleease healed, more sorrow assuaged. By it, no orpbane starving, no wldowd weeping. By it, none wounded in feeling, none injured in interest ; even the dram -maker and dram - seller will have glided into other 000upa- tione eo gradually as never to have felt the ohmage. and will stand ready to join all othere in the universal song of giadnese. And what a noble ally this to she oauee of political freedom ; with each an aid, its maroh cannot fail to be on and on, till every son of earth shall drink in rioh fruition the • eorrow•gaenohing draughts of perfect liberty, Happy day, when, all appetites controlled, ail passions subdued, all matter subjugated, mind, all - conquering mind, shall live and move, the monaroh of the • world ! And when the viotory shall be oomplete—when there ,ball -be neither a slave nor a drunkard on the earth -how proud the title of that land, whioh.may truly oleim to be_ihe._birthplaoe- and the cradle of both those revolutions ,bet shall have ended in that viotory. How nobly distinguished thin people, who shall have planted, and nurtured to maturity,, both the political and moral freedom of their species.—Abraham Lincoln in 1842. WORKING A NOW DODGB. The Honest Messenger Boy and the Grateful Old tientienean. eerAvioge4entolfeman ewho had pmoAengh 'underetotashi'boy.to say that the charge was thirty-eight Dente, and handed that. amount to him, says the Kansa° City Star. The boy smiled brightly at him, and eaid " I said twenty-eight bents. sir. You've given me thirty-eight Dente," The gentleman took off his eye -glasses, rubbed them with hie pocket h ndker±hiol, and planing them on hie nose again, gazed hard at the boy. y• rr eeiige"r';"� esld�te Wel wellyon sur- pries:me." Te boy continued to smile. He was a very bright -faced, clean -looking boy and the gentleman telt a great lump of Bend - went come into his throat as he looked into the lad's young eyes and thought of his own children. " Here," said he, taking a twenty five Alia we � Some Big$alariea. The following are some of the large salaries paid in New York : Chaunoey M. Depew, President of the New York•Central, $75,000 ; P. A. MoOnrdy, President of the Mniaal Life Insurance Company, $60,000 ; W. A. Beers. President of the New York Lite, $60,000 ; Frederic P. Oloott, President of the Central Truer Company, $60.000 ; John A. Stewart, President of the United States Trnet Company, $50,000 ; Richard King, President of the Union' Trust Com- pany, $50,000 ; J. W. Alexander, Vioe- President of the Equitable, $45,000. Late Wang. Philadelphia Record I just fell down" is the 'Meet slang expressing unutterable admiration of any person or thing. A swell young man wee marling a sooiety belle throagh the Aoademy of the Fine Arte. She asked him it he had ever seen " The Angelus," and was mystified by his enthu- siastic, reply : " Oh, to be sure ! and do yon know I,fell right down 1" First Prize. Brooklyn Eagle : She, glancing . at the olook at 11 45 p: m—Why did you not go to the dog show ? You would have been sure to take a first prize. He—settling himself , comfortably for another boor—I take a prize! Why, how She, resigning herself to the situation— As a setter. It is said in usually will -informed oirolee that the Duke of Fite is to have the vacant Garter. A good deal of disappointment has been felt in London sooiety at the lank of those lavish entertainments whioh were anticipated from the Prince's wealthy son - 'in -law, but murmuring is angraoioua when it is 'remembered that the condition of the Duohesa' health has been the cause, and -it is also rumored that the Duke hopes to have wren r some time in the early enmmer. Brown -Why is it that. Dobbin's wife never says that ehe heti nothing to wear ? Johnson—She used to be a ballet danger. "Angus Flower 99 The Hon. J. W. Fentlimore is the Sheriff of Kent Co., Del., and lives at Dover, the County Seat and Cap- ital of the State,. The&sheriff is 'a gentleman, fifty-nine years of age, and .this is what he says : •"I have " used 'your August Flower for sev- ' ` eral years in my fancily and for my " own use, and found it does me " more good.than any other remedy. " I have been troubled with what I call Sick Headache. A pain comes ' ` in the back part of my head first, " and then soon a general headache ' until I become sick and vomit. 1 " At tinges, trio, I have a fullness ' ` after eating, a pressure after eating " at the pit of the stomach, and ' sourness, when food seemed to rise til) itt my throat and mouth. \Vllcn' '` PILL' t1t•i, on if i t:1Rc. a "" little August Flower. it relit_vcs " sac, and is the hest rcillcdy 1 have " ever taken for it. For this reason. " I take it and recommend it to " other.; its a great remedy for 1)v's- -" pepsia, &c." J G. c -.---f -E-E Soit-Mamlfacltrrer ' dliii ; NC* 'ersc . U S. A. r TEA TABLlj GOSSIP ONE OF exist szv)ZN woND$lts. Oh he's a really wondrous man, With a redly woundrous head, _.. Who„ye�lll,lueeF_�t,biwt.FRou�ougt►tiil-• ' `" Wlieu there's nothing to be said e Spring styles will' soon appear if this weather oontinuee. —" A drop of honey draws more thee than a gallon of vinegar.'* —You will find there is no la,w• oompelling you to like people simply beoavt they are good. —He is neverl just right' ; the young - ,„inn,��.,.�^^'L,ld'�ty:'P•',�,'1�1,;41�.'i !�rv...r•S+��B++t F7�1�d:lm+!?'.'.d'7:>„1C•�T�S'e;Y ruElV•.-21':_T:a to act young. —It is better to have one friend of great value than many friends who are good for nothing. —A nachars is. —The Tokio Temperanoe Society was organize/Thy Mies Jessie Ackerman, March 28th, 1890; it now. numbers eight hundred members, preeen or you. You are an honest boy. Leave the district messenger service, as soon as poesible. I will see what I- oan do to get you a plane that is worthy of your in- tegrity. The boy thanked the kind gentleman and trudgedaway, grinning with delight. Upon reaching the sidewalk he was met by another meseeoger who looked inquiringly at him. " The old duok bit," said hs,'" I worked the razzle dazzle on him, and he came down for a quarter. He said I ought to atop runniur; messages, I am au honest, Well, I guess not ; that's $3 this week, Cull., I gums the buainese le good enough for me. Come on, and I'll blow you off to cigar - (Ales," Dinner at *mall Tables. An idea from Paris, that one or two New York hoeteeeee here recently iutroduaed, is that of serving dinner at small tables, in lies of one long one. It is, perhaps, rather a relief from the monotony of a long table, whioh, in the osee of a large dinner, ought never to be, but it is doubtful if, atter the novelty bail worn off, it will be liked, says, the -New York 'Timei. • The seats of honor will always be at the hostess table, and hear-,burns-and--jealoasiea-are-enre'Ic ,rise among those who find their. places at the lade favored ones. As only persons with large dining rooms now undertake large dinners, it is common for the two parallel lines to be broken by different arrange-, menta, which still keep all the guests at a common board. A Boy Atter His Mother's Heart. Baffale News : Smart Youngeun— Mother, can I dig up the garden for you to plant flowers ? Mother—What a thoughtful boy. - Yes, dear, and here's ten Dents ; I'm euro no other woman in this -neighborhood has each a kind, thoughtful mother's boy as mine. And then that kind, thoughtful mother's boy , goes triumphantly forth and ,aye aloud, so that all may hear who listen : " Bully ! I didn't see at first how I was to get them worms without her finding out that I was goin' fiehin'. You bet I'm a dandy." Carpet Cleaning by Compressed Air. A new system of oarp'"et cleaning, which is said to be very successful, employs com- pressed air for removing the duet. The maohine oonsiste of a skeleton roller, over and parallel to .which is an iron tube pierced at intervals with holes. The iron tube oeoillates in a horizontal direction when in operation, and as the carpet or rug passes over the roller below it ie claimed that this 'simple treatment entirely re. moves the duet Consideration. Texas Siftings The boys have been making a great deal of noise, and at last their father appears with a strap, and seizing Tommy begins' to thraeh him. " Don't wear yourself out, father," ,aye Tommy, "remember that Billy and Johnnie have to get some, too." tirgi • How is This Y Philadelphia. Times : Nobody hap ever explained how it happens that when a New York politioan seeks salvation and joina the church his creditors begin to get nn. easy and want to have an expert toexamine bieiooka. OCEAN post -offices are to be established on April let on the German steamers plying between New York, Bremen and Hamburg. These offices oomprise a clerk representing the United States Govern- ment and a clerk representing the German Government. After the system has been established, all mail matter from the United States to Germany and from Ger- many to the United States sent on German steamers will be handled during the voyage, so that npod the arrival •of the steamers the letters for delivery in New York City, for instance, will be ready to be given to barriers for immediate . delivery to the parties addressed. Mail matter for pointe beyond New York will be plaoed in separate ponohes, and oan be taken at oboe to the oars and started on their land journey without delay. When a steamer arrive° in New York City early in the day, it is expected that nnder'thie new system lettere will be delivered so that if necessary a reeponee oan be prepared and mailed in the next outgoing steamer, which perhaps Bails on the same day. British eteamers might adopt a similar system with equal; ad- vantage. e atne a eat o ee a ado. t wse s fool robin, as its subsequent death appears to show. P. S.—It was a sparrow, and it didn't die.—,fudge. —Henry George ie back from Bermuda. " Why," said he, " I feel like a boy again." He hae.beoome an enthusiastic cyclist. He is so run down to Washington—not on• his own wheel, however,;bat on railroad rumb- lere. —Miss Lilian C. Young, eldest daughter of Rev. Egerton Ryerson Young, who was for many years missionary among the Cree Indiana in the Northwest, was married to Mr. R. Newton Helme, of England, in Trinity Methodist Church, Toronto, last evening. —English teetotalers now number a Duchess amongst them. The Marohionese of Tavietook, now Duobeas of Bedford,_is, like her sister, Lady Henry Somerset, a total abstainer. Other ladies belonging to the upper ten ales wear the blue ribbon. Notable amongst them are the Countesses of Carlisle and Ellesmere. It is estimated that to completeyoung George Vanderbilt's+ castle in North - Caro- line it will require ten yesra of labor and the expenditure of from $8,000,000.to D. D. L13.81 PROMPTLY CURED Cures Also: Neuralgia, Lumbago, Sciatica, Sprains, B ruises, B urns, Wounds, Swellings, Soreness, Frost- bites, St ifn ess, All Aches. The Chas, A, Vogeler Co., Baltimore, Md. Canadian Depot Toronto, Oct. BY I , SCOTT'S COTT'S i ULSIOk , Of Pure Cod ;• lyes Oil and WI • HYPOPHOSPHITES Y of Lime and c /� Soda Scott's s as a jnr,y'ect muls�on Emutsto�a. It is a wonderful Flesh Producer. It is the Best Remedy for CONSUMPTION, Scrofula, Uronchitis,Wasting Dis- eases, Chronic Coughs and Colds. PALATABLE AS MILK. Scott's Emulsion is only put up in salmon color wrapper. Avoid all imitationsor substitutions. C Sold by all Druggists at 50c, and $1:60. ll((t SCOTT & BOWNE, Belleville. w.; rt :f C ver Plso's Remedy for Catarrh is tho Best: Easiest to Use and Cheapest. • QATAR R H Sold by druggists or sent by matt 50o. E. T.-ozeltino, Warren, Pa., U. 8. A. . 1 100 S. ..)44.11ackalElk111111p1 TO Til E P:I)ITO11:--- Please inform t':°ova named disease. By its timely use thousands ofe a aderS esst�cases at I t'lave ben p cmanenttlly el+1 /11 1.s.m..l be glad to send two ,bottles, of my remedy FREE to any o, your readers woo nave- N •utnptton .1 they will send me theit Enpresc end Post Office Address., i ospertfnll-, Y A, SLO C. ia W, Aneaten,,q,, a.. "a...izOlu7or OAPT' .RIO. �L` to s:as love tars arPirr err ,itt a,• !1!1 t i'9 `E �,,`! A ('A rrltv,7Ly 0* POW 1e, rr,t<^ 43 Z ,:'t - .its S, ;,.. __ !3w«-tom.•..--...e.,� it •' ,!r9 ' ,n,,„ c, .'111 i' C,1.1:P 1,s, -0 Or', r r o „< n +'rrw "n' '0"' , r*"Ptf' tv- x fiCri'. ..:•fir TRWW SAW S OF OOT 'L(t GIVEN AAY YEARLY. i i9� a 'V'.'hen 1 r•1;• Cure 1 'do not tor# n•rrely to st..h 1'1•111 f01" a time, an ‘.04 n9^,51 cunt:, 11, \•,, ;o the disease o,Ftg 0. 1rums; s-. y,rudy to�`4re ,`0 r 'T11hr hot , v ',•rr i\utg A ,'tiro• tr-,-+:44 -- tad* -44.,* -P n•4", ^i37a�,-' i`r•_Q1 r.l A!i it C% Ft1GEF _ .. r as - 'i7`:1'13'r3'7',�; r>+ rN" 4 • terse �Clln' e x.4/2 341d!' Yu Grund' Watson, tg, . ittIssle• Y jr. ;' 3h; Angie r