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The Exeter Times, 1890-1-16, Page 6T$£ lj•t ,RBDR, QF ill', LUUQIA most hopelems. Leeabea are applied to the pWes where the`fanga penetrated, the skin aeing fuels scratched, and when the leeches asetilandn New Station in the 'eat Indies, have donetheir work the neighboring garb It was ab the opening o£ a glorious trcpl• iawell squeezed with the baud* in order to talc morning in deemary, 1854, that the little draw out as laugh venom aB payable with 1.600 ton, steamer on wbtctx I had taken the blood, and the Dumker of leech appli• ppusage oast anchor in the very unhealthy cations varies with the degree in which the lira remarkably beautiful port of St Lucia, blood flaws; "Q, glue of spirits with a one of the Cerribbeant Islands. Lofty variety of medical concoctions accompanies thea treatment after the application of the leecb, and the residue of the bexbs goes to make a ponitioe for the wound. The pa- tient is kept as warm as pQseible and not from its charm of geographical situs• allowed to go to sleep, nor in he allowed to tion, however, St, Lucia promiece to play drink save a preparation Made of the berbe. an impertant role by reason of the Eaglieh already used, mixed with a little lime•juioe Qovernment,'v having selected it as a piece and a third part at eplrita. The first band- to atone coal for it* war ebipe, ;amct, as coal age le removed at the end of twelve bourne meet' be protected, the taxpayer is now once alter witch a second poultice, similar to tine more caned neon ler a few nmllioza to build first, is laid on for the next twelve bourn, fortif catkne at the mouth of the barber, to ab the end of which time one may term an open, the channel, ereet Steno wharves, and opinion regarding the oouree of the patient pub into shape the venerable Morne fort by the colcda+ion, of the atrflanrnaation and the that frowns down upon the town of Castries, amount of venom drawn into the poultioo. In three or four Jaya at the outside tbe pa- tient baa reoovered,unleea the serpent's ven- om pierced an artery or a tendon or en im- potent vein; for in eneli oases human ani fa eseleee and in twelve or fifteen hours 'on peva Ie'cribut a hat natures # " Lebat sesa tells ne that many atka* the serpent's wound mane drastically by gargl- ing their throatwith Spirit and then euck. bug the venom Item the bitten pari, repeat- ing thin, eperation over and over and pre:armg aronnd the injured par* at the saute time.. phe risk io great in case any of thin venom gets into the eyateea by swallowing er other- wire. Ile also tells of a rnako called the coubemore, which appear; later under other Hamer, whets eepe;Ial deligb4 it is to attack, the Ter de lance, Perhepe the is Cribs de- scribed by Breen; at any rate, it bites like a dog, is 'nob pobeenane, and hoe a head long and round like as eel, While that of the ter de lance lr toren•cor. tired and fiat, The ooulentero which Lebec referral to particularly had been arrALLQWANO A NSW W110I.1s, eaob stage in tbe frog's program' being mark ed by the extension of the skin of tie make, which wall ton fee* long- Should ono Of arastl to nesse « the*, beeata gime a man, the right thing Mostly grass emleen,ly enb;ed to the to do, aaya the reverend gentlemen, is to reptblo taste, and In that rima not only wan i 114,z,g, ter the oonlermore getaao MUM bead, be nob bitten, but noneof the trooper; or Rwy on him tbatbe ie Unable to doublerap• laborer* *offered An that score, 04® he said idly ; in tact, ie Pas halploen .as a wolf on the hia 11ajor was walking aver :clue mowu ice running atter a skater. When the grass directly towarel a'•fer de lance", with- coUiemore and ler do lance meat ooh Is cut eeeirez it. The beast, however, instead • operoaate by the desire to swallow the of following the rales laid down for bis gnid.other's head immediately and time euffooete ansa in such cases by Mr. Fronde, tamely hire, .Uckiag the resit of the body down Samnned hie cgly head into the matted grasp ; afterward in leisure morneatL in the hope at eixaping, and in that pesittort 1,030 noticed In 1694 what Ober, the status - the Major walked over him. Nat only that, alist, asys of thf*sneke under smother Immo,but the death•dealing monster remained in that wham bitten by kiwi venomonr enemy, that oatrich.like peeliion until the Sergeant be rube bbnfeu avocet en herb celled " La hadene back Sf,y feet, ploked 411a stick, . mal•nommee, barba flue, polntue, asstzdonoo and broken hia back with it. the aagro'au toucher, raafa fort *pro an gone' --aa boya who acted at cur guides were volatile herb which, he *aye, it used by the blacks In painting the savage qualities of the far de as so antidote to the bite of the for del/One lance and assured us that many were killed Aa boor Mr. Breen and Pero Labat had by their bites, but, as I expected, they meld A* at least ten yosee In the Antilles before not refer to a single case of which they had personal knowledge. My well informed Son SCAM; said tint if the bite was attended to even within twenty.four hours the victim need not be laid up more than a month, and that; lice jeicewaa an excellent thlog as an antidote to the potion. No part of the Weal Indies Is se rich in snake starlets u S. Lucia. Froud* tell, how this far de lame bunts Ma human prey by ,creeping along a garden path until the guileless tourist falls foul of him, when in the flesh of the eye the fierce beast hoe stabbed him with fan s that never do 1 than kill. Coleridge, a nephew cf rho poet, Tho,deafre to Impress the reader's imaghi. who visited the inland in 1825, .gtvee the Arlon induced Fronde no doubt to lend gentle reader a shudder by eeying that nob ready ear to snake stories—a motive that even on horseback is the irgni'itivetraveller operated with (quid force when' ho speaks of 5;te7: EROm A seveou MONSTER scorpions, which in reality need never known ae the wood elavo, whose bite ie ee frighten an intelligent ,person. Lebat saps deadly ae that of Froude'a horror and whose that ono of hie workmen, who received a Ming from one of these insects, suffered no more than from a wasp, and did nob think ib of stfeolenb importance to coxae working. In feat, the'workman assured the sympa• this subject more autho,itative than the yarn thotic misaionary that the pain was " fort volcanic peaks use abruptly from the mean's edge and bent the harbor SO securely as. to remind one of the moat beautiful of ports, Nagasaki, Aside Through the courtesy of a gentleman to whom, I Clad a .lino of introduction, horses were provided for my friend Page and my. :self, and we est out for the Memo fort, perched on a peak 900 feat high. The road wax macadamized, but So Wept as to be ini- practicable for vehicle's, especially as there are no occaiiocal levels to make a primerefreshing. Tbo buts cf =green heavily thatched and shaded by ceceanub and banana trees, were picturesque otlects an either aide ofus, turd increased the rceenahlance to Jape'where the native hats and temple's, parched in tea delle, enliven the lubuntain aides to great heights above the water, Scsl SEN ABOUT VS W4s ¥Axl:rrzCa.'lT and moailuxuriant in tropical growth. We sew no soaker', however, and could lied no Authentic' account of any cue here having te been killed by a Ter da lance, at being the snake of'which Fruudo tells meet won= derful stories labia aeceunt of this island S:rgeaat of Royal Engineers whom 1 gnestloned told me that he bad been here; three and a half years and bad surveyed the hill on the north aide of the barber, where earthworke were now being erected : that his Survey was in linea five feet apart and recording their opinions of the makes there and as neither Air. Fronde uor M1. Colerid had spent much mere than as many hours in St. Lucia, the weight of evidenoo appear to me, at least, overwhelmingly in favor o the etatemcnte of the firat quoted. Wo m rusonebly conclude, therefore, theb maker like ,harks, wolves, and other savage ant mels, may bo vary nuts,enetomers to deal with when desperate by reason of hunger o a painful wound, but that wader ordinary circumstances their instinct leads then. to ran away whenever they menet quite oer R less taI* of the object they meat, ge by raison of the operatione of Cauadisn sealers have orgioatod with the Alaska s Cnupany. From what the Sun *eye it can t be seen how little reliance is to be placed on ay these assertions. , "Nelly Illy" reached Hong Hong on Tees • dayleetoilhertripround the globe for the New World. Sho arrived two days in advance ✓ of her itinerary, but she had five days to wait for a steamer for Yokohama. She has nova' traversed nearly two-thirds of the whole • diatsuce in about forty dere bub the slowest part of the journey is before her. Not muchMi, has yob been beard of u Bisland, who is a travelling in she oppositedirection far the Cosmopolitan, but the greater part of her journey so far baa bean serosa the Nolen. Melt people aro inclined to believe that she will be the winner In the strange race, as tho obateelce in her way are nab *0 great as those encountered on the journey the other way. Both ladies, however, are aimoab oertaln to accomplish an unprecedented feat. likely to; appear ?r these *ens, and depth enough for any ship in the British Navy excepting tbe very heaviest monsters—oer- teinly water enough for all her oruisere. Everything at English, Harbor is ready for oocupamoy. It is on a very healthy island and one well situated, from a strategiostend. point, .£QPIQS OF TLE [B. jOH11 LABAT 'S fndan Pale Ale and XXX Bran Mut There are !even monuments to the ven. ices olties of Italy to (sionst Cavour, bub not one in Bonar* Confound yen 1" Dried en *abbot to hie: model who was dressed in chain armor from heed to foot; "can't you keep mill?". rifles yen pias*, sort," replied the model,' "ye'veahut a mushkeeter inside thehilmiti". somewhat singniar vase of blood -poison ing has ocarred in Berlin,, A woman walked across her room without slipper,, and a pin ran into one of her feet. .It was pulled ou.b' at once, bub the foot soon swelled, with most violent, psis, and a lector was called in, He deolared le to be a case of blood -poisoning, canoed by the colored wool of the etooking, Re ordered her to he taken art once to an hospital, where the feet wan amputated. There are many people a .ve yet veils want something for nothing. A man named R. A. Sears, of ¥inneapoiis, eenbautoffereogive, tbroa piecee of ele.gentlee nphobatered parlor furniture m an advertisement to all who would send 90 sauna to pay boxing. tiny !, sent the Mena). and gat three cuta little iron toys with plash cease and pretty Salol. The recipient* were surprised, and yob alms n ot chits that tbay were badly awhtdied, for they gob all they paid for. 7t le astima*ed by the New York "Eat lathe' latlu that the IAveatmA@Ala of Baldish capital be foreign countries for the current Year will e xceed $900.010.000, List year the otpital subscribed to bower and oorenenfe*of all dee• ctiptlone amounted to 1800,745.000; its 1887 the entomb was U80 880.QQ0, and in. 1896 over 1505.890,.000. Theextraordbnary meg- nitude of the eggregete of tbeso some stay give rise to doubt as to the wiedomdlspIayed to their £nveab rents, bub it leaves no uacer- tafnty whatever as to the grant wealth of a country whfoh has Pao much capital te;pare. [m. this oounection 1t, I* Intonetitg to tenni that Air. Robert Giff'en, the welt• known statistician, *etiolates tite acaurnu- l�at,t0ady',wea tb of Great Bitola at 210,600,- Speaking of the foot that under the now lease at the. Alaska seal fitbariea the bisalt- atbon of the catch lar to be reduced to 69.000 instead et 100,020 as at protea*, the New York them quextlene the neetwatty for the reduction, I* sane ;Itiaperfectly evident that it Is for the interos* of the Alaska Com menial ;.ompaay, which wishes not only to rauow its lease bub to do so with the lout' possible competition and an the loweat pos- sible terms to magnify the extent of the Illicit poaching and its injury to the coals.'" It la well to remember thao all the aaaertloas so freely wade duning the past year or so ss to the danger of extermination of the far Boal inatinote are no lees desperate. Neither of them gentlemen had seen any snake in St. .Leola; no mare have I. But ib will never do to leave the island without eomethingan of an Engineer Sergeant. mediocre," and by nighb the pan heti quite I therefore take pleasure in asanring pro•dne PP_ nand at ong with the swell'm gt opective travellers to thio plane that in 1844 Every schoolboy knows the beautiful poem St. Lucia was pronounced to be "infested by Wolfe called "The Burial of Sir John by countless reptiles," and this from the pen Moore," the same who audited in robbing ia# one Who lied resided thirteen years in the Sb. Lucia from Franoe, and for his eervioes Awe, Mr. Breen. BM hie snake story was made Qovenucr of the place, In stroll. and Coleridge, in that he appears to know rite lruJxsxlo nun S differs materially from those of both Prouder about pe_ither fer she nines porwoof] elate, but tell" bf the Morns Forb ib is pleasant to think that in this lonely spot once laved the hero whose name and fame ere now on the lips of millions of children in all lands where the English language is spoken. This fort, formerly galled the Morne For- tune, was a feeble affair during the French occupation and surrendered to the English in 1794 without firing a shot, although the French commander, Gen. Ricard, had 300 men ander him at the time. R'card, by the way, was strongly suspected of treachery in connection with this surrender, for he asked the English rah to send himto Am erica instead sad of to his own country, anticipating little pleasure from remaining in the 'service of the Revolutionary Government of the Paris of that day. His position could never have been taken by storm, for even in 1700, when Lebat was there, he says that "10 men could crush 10,000 by merely rolling logs down on them," In the seventeenth cen- tury the Morne and sister peaks were refuges for the deserters from men-of-war of all flatlet's, who retreated to those pinnacles whenever a ship hove in sight, and .managed to have a very good time in the intervals, for food was abundant and easy to procure. It is popularly supposed that the English captured this fort by storm, but this is a mistake, if we may believe the Chaplain of one of the war ships engaged in the attack upon the place in 1795, who himself accom- panied the troops during all the operations and witnessed Ricard a surrender. Since the British Governmenthas changed its mind and concluded to put Sb. Lucia in a state of defence the barracks on this lofty pinnacle are being pub into habitable shape. Carpenters were at work putting down floor. ing, and ib cannot be many months before this ruin is converted into one of the most agreeable residences if not the strongest military posts in America. The buildings are of thick masonry or brink wake, ane designed with taste, The British taxpayer,: in oonjnnotion .with the West Indian, ba nailed upon to spend a large amount of .money in ,St. Lucia for the purpose of erecting here a coaling depot. If the island was famed .for theexcellence edits climate there would be good reason for keeping troops here ; bub on the contrary, it is notoriously a bad place for Europeans. As if there were.no other coaling station in the Antilles, we could imagine the expendi turej notified; but therein a most excellent one on the island of Antigua, where ships draw- ingtwenty one; feet can haul up alongside of a magnificent stone dock and bake in coal with every convenience. English Harbor is the name of the place, a port 'sheltered from the wind and about hick ' w in ti millions of pounds ' timespast,war A p da have been spent for war defence. Only the other day I inspected there mot ample spaco for the largest fleet of a nbfqulboua "yellow asepant, whose bite, however, maybe effectually cared if prompt. Iy attended to, and from what 1 learned in Castries I am disposed to back the state. menu of the thirteen -year reaidenter as against those of the two gentlemen fiat quoted, though the one be a historian and the other the son of a Bishop. This yellow serpent, however, has an enemy oohed the oribo, who is both aggressive and powerful, and attacks hie yeilowahip at eight and withcnb provocation. Mr. Breen says that the elle serpent w a enb in these sae samba y ba usually comes off second hest, and that the cribs s so clever that when he is through with the fight he rolls about in the leaves of a plant called Pied poule, which operation not only counteracts any evil effect' from the other's bite, but ants as a tonin for more fight of the same kind, so that ultimately the oribo is sure to gain the victory, whfoh he signalizes by swallowing his victim whole, commencing with the head. Sometimes the oribo is called upon to swallow an adversary longer and bigger than 'himself, an operation that might discourage one Iess fruitful in resources. The work is accomplished in this wise: The oribo swallows as much as the cubic contents of his skin permits whereupon he goes to sleep until time nerves him for a second effort. He then stoke in what is needful to keep him- self distended, and thereupon once more seekses r t and alae repeating a p, p g b hese oper- ations until the apparently impossible task to accomplished, , namely, swallowing more than himself. No one since 1694 seems to have become t.t`er acquainted than the Dominican missionary, Labab, with this much -dreaded beast, and ib somas but fair to quote our clerical pioneer, on the subject,' for he had practical experience with ;his snakeshlp. To begin wfth,. Labat agrees with the best. informed Creoles of to -day that the bite is nob necessarily fatal, and that the method re• sorted to by native medicine men, or bush' doctors, as they are called, is as follows : "First, bind the bitten member strongly seven or eight .fingers' width above the wound and walk home as gniukly as posse ble, without touching anything to drink, 'a twins du'on ne venflle boirs de ea propre urine qui dans oette occasion est un puissant oontre•polson.' 'Walking fe under the oir• cumstances, very, painful, owing to rapid swelling, but it roust be done, Sometimes the victim, in drawing himself away from the bite,'breaks'away at the same time the venomous diIRVEO TEETTt OF THE SIMI 11NT, bioh of course produces w p a duces the most aggro- anted case, unless it be that the venom has been poured into an artery; when it fe al. .S Former Manuel Bridge Projeot. The prcj:ob for a bridge across the Eng. lith Channel, says the "Engineerirg and Building 'Record," recalls a scheme of th name kind proposed twenty years apo, beaid which the present one appears tam indeed. In 1868, according to an old volum of London "Engineering," the French limper or endorsed a aeaign prepared by M Marie Bouteb, who was called an. engineer. Bente' modeetlq proposed, for £8.000,000, to build in three yearn, ten opens of 9846 feet each, with a capacity of 24 loaded trains at the centre of eaoh span. There were to be five parallel rosin trusses 198 feet deep at the ends, and 51 at the centera, each truss fear- fully and wonderfully composed of .120 parallel (nearly) horizontal iron wires 2.inch cable in the same vertical plane. After being woven together by cross ropes they were to become endowed with enormous resistance to flexure and aat as rigid. beams. The wrought -iron piers were to be floated on buoys, adjusted by an enormous set screw in the center. and leveled on and bonded with the underlying eand by sorewpilee, much like the adjustment screws or level plate. The Lass 0' Logia. Annie wi' the gowden looks, Brewed lass on Louie braes, Where, npspringing'mang the rooks, Hazels cluster wi' the elms ; Proudly waves the thistle braw, Golden broom tee poets praise; But the behest flower o' a' Is the lass o' Logie braes... Shepherd lads on Oohil'e steepa, Dand 'ring through the heath and whin, Sigh for Annie, while she keeps Tryst wi' me atour the lynn. And she's promised to be mine— Mine for aye, whate'er betide ; Bide awee, she'll no repine : Soon she'll be my bonnie bride. Winter soon will pass away, Though the days be long and drear ; Summer brings her bridal day— Parting wi' the braes sae dear. Far free Airthrey's bosky bower, Allan's stream so clear and bright, Though I gae; at gloaming hour They, dear spots, will rise in sight. Farewell, Logie'e bonnie braes, Lonely wood and ferny dell ; Oh ! what memories ye raise ; Wae I am to say farewell. Wae e'en though l've won the flower Fairest found among thy rooks- Wee till thou'rb set in my bower, Annie wi' the golden looks. A Scant Pattern: Mrs. Bascom (rushing into the house with a scream) : "For mercy sake 1 Ebenezer is down in the pasture and the bull's goring h1mL Deam r s ak ornails fnobl through . ( "Indeed b y, owah. half a dozen pins)d1 I didnt know as there was enough material in Mr. Bascom for that 1" Highest awaras ana Medals for Parity land Excel-. Inceo at Centennial Exhibition, Philadelphia, 1876; Canada, 1876; Australie,1977; and Paris, Franca, 1878. TE$TIMONIA118 SEliJICTED: Pro!„$ II Colt, PublieAnalyst, Toreute.saxe:,..r±Tsladait to be perfectly sound eonteiningEn impurities ox edulter- etior.s, and our stconglyrecomnxtend it as perfectly puro.an.d sada n 1 Ndwaras1Pt rofoseorofChemistry, Montreal,septa l: Ondtheau to be remarkably sound ale,, brewed from pursngs,lt and hops. Rev. 1'• J. Ed. Ps e.Professor of Chemiatry /anal Uzi.verPity, Quebec. says :—^'t have analyzed the Indian Palo'Ale manufactured bydohnl,atratt,I,ondeu,Ontario, and lave forted it u lighta?e. eenteluiug but litho alcohol, of a dolt-- cioua eavor,and of a veil, agreeable taste'and sureexior quality, audeomparos with the best imported ales, 1 have also analyzed 00 Porter XXX Stout, of the same brewery, which is of excellent On4?aity; its flow la very agreeaiaiu; itis a toniantoreenergetia neer: t':-., above ale, for it is a little rielier inaleohel, 'and earl be compared advantage- ous iy with any iapported arti.l•e. ASK IVV41,tUicEF,E)GI R FO S IT. nt..man, ANUFADTURERS 0 and, Square .Upright PIANOFOR.TEB. Tite CW est Nanufaoturers in the Dominic. ` .# even Thousand Flame how Use. Tile lieintaroan ninon axe mated for. Tone, Regulated Delicate Touch, Their Perfectly Even Well Balanced Scala Tie Whole Composed of the Chaiceet Material and of tileMvet Thorough Workmanship Send For Illustrated Catalogue. Faotory:Viest Toronto Wareroems and tfce, 11 ? IC in Sty West T '!'•"•O , TT `SPP'" e OFA •TEIi 2l1 ES. Pref« Loisette's EMORY DISCOVERY AND TRAINING METHOD la spite of adulterated imitutionr whttah mise the theory. and ptaotiasiresults etthe Original. la Of site aroaaeet mterepresentati001 by Carious wouldloo oompetttorn,audiospits o "baseat ptatorob'"biat of the fruit of his *bora, fall of which demonstrate the undoubted superiority and popelaritzof his teaching) Prof. Layette sArt o Never .Oersatene s reeojtiiaed today in both Hemispheres es marking en Epoch in Memo Capers. • I'ros to Memory n 4 a a sent M f arae e pant ) H tri Daimonsofpeople fn.titparts of.the globe nce Ili wing tally studied hi W b correspondence, showing that his Sys , .. on K tehifa baigq tudfed.got reading.o i ` a ocwcI,eke. ,AvxIirop.clu,e Terme and Tes a address Prt. v, A, LOISZTTIi, 237 Fifth kihrine, i-Scr -0. 4+, b 5'ct' J0ry t, 05 °C` c_ a 1' • el° 4• .00 004'0' ci, Co{ • ,`.;c• do e, r Nil •,' • • � ,� �..c0 '9 c>. S+ •Irk' .0 4 �,,SY`c ti 440GGtit6, 1t, e� oto ����r�, c. s ��s How Lost, How Restored Just published; a new edition of Dr. Culver- weirs Celebrated Essay oni 'kr radical cure of SPatteAToltouat& or incapacity induced by excess of early indiscretion The celebrated author,in this admirable essay, dearly demonstrates froi b a thirty years' successful practice, that the alam:ing consequences of self- abuse may be radically cured; pofatfhg out a mode of cure at4 once simple, certain and effectual, by means of which every sufferer'no matter what his condition may be, may cure himself cheaply, pri. 'Moly and radically. Thio lecture should be in the hands of every 3VWSb and every man iii the land, lent under seal, in a plain envelope, to any ad diisa, post-paid, on receipt of four cents, or two postage stamps. Samples of Medicine free. 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Price 01 a box, or aft boxes for $6, A'ohs lml,P,7313114Ill GIOVANNAN; * 296 Bing Street West Tuxontm, ec"ate Manufactured only by Thomas Holloway, 78 New Oxford Street, late 033, Oxford Street, London. tr Purchasers should look to the Label on the Boxes and Pots If the address is not 533, Oxford Street, Landon, they are spurious, Exeter Lumber Yazd The Undersigned wishes to informhepublic in general that he keeps —constantly in stock— All Kinds of BUILDING MATERIAL DRESSED ORUNDRESSED. A large stock of hemlock always on hand at mill prices. Flooring, Siding dr ssed—inch, inch -and -a -quarter, inch -and -a half and two inch. Sash Doom, Blinds, Mouldings and all Finishing Material, Lath, &e. SHINGLES A SPECIALTY.--Sompetition challenged. The best and the largest stock, and at lowest prices. Shingles A 1. All dressed lumber thoroughly seasoned and ready for : use. No shrinkage assured, A call will bear out the above, TH t� OLD EST � r� .ABLIS F G{l Y �i/ 111, 13. �D S Man.age of OLTZ Aq•HNT-.; Hay Township Farmers' Mut.. • ual Fire Insurance Co.. A PURELY FARMERS' COMPANY. Live .Stook also insured, when in the .fields, or on the road in-oharge of owner, or,sordants alsoinaanfaotnrer of the. Improved Surpries washer and Wringer Machines. ',Agent inc Tomb Stones, and the Watson .Implem eats. Uudertakin8 promply attended to. G. HOLTZMAN, Zurich. W7"�k z kcam ;zr ;. :L talent 3F,JkXOR EiLla:ES$,r� r li , 1 crrllx• ii^ t...sE Hops c3 .155 „x. . gsr anto' ed . gitfele;b ..;ItetsBen 7 a t . i. . :1: 10ra.:itiall ors. Stook ea7il lata with iast-selling aoeClait,,G. PIT ;mar ,vr.at . ae Gse'Write 1 Sd.8tD4„1S C- .. axen, ^Fai 6 a 4ro(This nus l ,.labIa.